Buildings have a funny way of reinventing themselves. Some get makeovers so smooth you’d never guess their former lives! Others can’t shake their past. Chesterfield is home to a perfect example. I usually pass it once or twice a day, and I can’t help but smirk. This Mexican restaurant isn’t fooling anyone: it’s clearly an old Pizza Hut.

Pizza Hut got its start in 1958 thanks to two enterprising brothers from Wichita named Dan and Frank Carney. Chesterfield joined the party in 19781. By 1983, its proprietor, Paul Kozel, also owned five similar outlets in Anderson, four in Muncie, and one in Winchester2. On the day it opened, Chesterfield’s Pizza Hut featured free Pepsi soft drinks and Looney Tunes glasses. Of course, the giveaway lasted only as long as the supplies did3.
Chesterfield’s Pizza Hut shut its doors sometime before 2007, when the familiar red roof was transformed into a tavern called The Spot4. A few years later, in 2010, restaurateur Joe Hinkle gave the building new life once again by opening Flamingo Joe’s, a place well known for its home-cooked breakfasts and lunches5.
Flamingo Joe’s appears to have closed by the time I worked nearby ten or twelve years ago. In 2022, the old Pizza Hut was purchased again and painted in bright colors6. Today, the building is home to “Mexican The Old Way and Bar.” I’ve heard the food is fantastic! Still, I’m loath to give up Juan’s.
Sources Cited
1 Madison County Office of Information & GIS Services. (2025). Parcel ID: 48-12-11-200-157.000-035. Madison County, Indiana Assessor. map, Anderson, IN.
2 New Pizza Hut opens on Bethel (1984, May 18). The Muncie Evening Press. p. 16.
3 Chesterfield…Pizza Hut Grant Opening! (1978, September 28). The Anderson Daily Bulletin. p. 26.
4 Yencer, R. (2007, September 29). Felon suing tavern owners. The Muncie Star Press. p. 1.
5 New restaurant opens in Chesterfield (2010, June 24). The Muncie Star Press. p. 46.
6 (See footnote 1).

These old Pizza Hut buildings make me nostalgic. They were the go-to in the early to mid 1970’s!
I could do a series on abandoned pizza huts of this style. They’re all over!