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Photo by Renee Dominguez/ KUT News. Cisco's Restaurant Bakery and Bar on East Sixth Street has been open for 74 years.

Cisco’s gets a $50,000 grant to preserve the restaurant’s history

Friday, August 2, 2024 by Corinne Piorkowski

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Cisco’s Restaurant, Bakery & Bar has been serving classic Tex-Mex dishes like huevos rancheros and migas to Austin residents since 1950. Now, 74 years later, the restaurant has received $50,000 as part of an effort from the National Trust of Historic Preservation to support small, historic businesses.

Longtime customer Gardner Selby said he’s been going to Cisco’s since the ’80s.

“Cisco’s is a place people can go to routinely that will give them a taste of Austin 50 years or older,” he said.

Selby said he couldn’t imagine having to give up Cisco’s food or staff, which “has become like family” to him.

Thanks to this federal grant, he won’t have to.

The nationwide Backing Historic Small Restaurants program gave $2.5 million to 50 restaurants this year. Each restaurant received $50,000.

Matt Cisneros, the owner of Cisco’s, said when he shared that the restaurant received the grant, it blew up on social media to a previously unseen level.

“It was very cool when we found out,” Cisneros said. “(Cisco’s) is an encapsulation of time in a city that’s just ever-changing. It’s preserved to what it was always intended to be: a casual place of no judgment. A place where you can hang out with anyone and see anyone.”

Cisneros took over the business in 2017 after his grandfather, Rudy “Cisco” Cisneros, started it 74 years ago. He said he didn’t want his family’s legacy to end as Austin rapidly changed and trendier restaurants popped up.

“We (wanted to) save this, keep the livelihood of our employees going as well as the people who come in all the time, and (keep) the generational ties to the restaurant,” Cisneros said.

The business wasn’t necessarily struggling, he said, but with a building that’s over 120 years old, it needs some repairs. The staff plans to use the money for upkeep. They will restore the exterior of the building and repaint graffitied murals. Cisneros said these efforts will also help with the overall cash flow to employees.

Cisneros said he thinks Austinites will appreciate the restoration of Cisco’s and be reminded of the many historic relics around the city.

“Eat at all the places you want to eat out, but remember how the city got to where it is,” Cisneros said. “Places like Cisco’s and other historic spots made the city cool.”

This story was produced as part of the Austin Monitor’s reporting partnership with KUT.

The Austin Monitor’s work is made possible by donations from the community. Though our reporting covers donors from time to time, we are careful to keep business and editorial efforts separate while maintaining transparency. A complete list of donors is available here, and our code of ethics is explained here.

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