If You Could Bring Back One East Brunswick Establishment…
There’s nostalgia… and then there’s East Brunswick nostalgia.
When Eyes On EB asked a simple question — “If you could bring back one East Brunswick establishment from the 70s or 80s, what would it be?” — nobody expected the flood of memories that followed. But within days, the post exploded with tens of thousands of views and hundreds of comments from people reliving a version of East Brunswick that felt larger than life.
And honestly? The comments weren’t just about restaurants or stores.
They were about a feeling.
For a generation of residents, East Brunswick wasn’t just another suburban town. In the 70s, 80s, and even into the 90s, EB was the place. People from neighboring towns came here to shop, eat, hang out, see movies, bowl, cruise Route 18, and spend entire weekends at places that became local institutions.
Back then, East Brunswick felt like the center of everything.
The Kings of Nostalgia: What People Wanted Back Most
Some names came up once.
Others came up over… and over… and over again.
Here’s the unofficial ranking of the establishments people mentioned the most.
1. Farrell’s Ice Cream Parlour
Farrell’s absolutely dominated the conversation.
For many residents, Farrell’s wasn’t just dessert — it was an event. Birthday parties, giant sundaes, sirens, singing staff, and the energy of Brunswick Square Mall during its peak years. People remembered the experience as much as the ice cream itself.
A lot of commenters tied Farrell’s directly to memories of the mall when it was thriving and packed every weekend. It represented a time when Brunswick Square wasn’t just somewhere to shop — it was where people went.
2. The Route 18 Flea Market
The flea market may have been the biggest symbol of “old East Brunswick.”
People remembered wandering aisles for hours looking at collectibles, toys, electronics, records, tools, sports cards, knockoff merchandise, and random treasures you never knew you needed. Several commenters mentioned going there with parents or grandparents every weekend.
It wasn’t polished. That was the point.
The flea market felt authentic, local, and uniquely East Brunswick.
3. The Turnpike Drive-In Theater
This one hit people emotionally.
Residents remembered loading into cars, bringing snacks, wearing pajamas, and watching double features under the stars. Multiple commenters specifically remembered the “$10 a carload” nights and the excitement of seeing movies outdoors before massive multiplexes took over everything.
The drive-in represented a slower era — one where nights out felt simpler.
4. Chi-Chi’s
No restaurant created more “I forgot about that place!” reactions than Chi-Chi’s.
People remembered birthdays, fried ice cream, endless chips and salsa, and what felt like a huge night out at the time. For many families in Middlesex County, Chi-Chi’s was one of the first “destination” restaurants where going to dinner actually felt special.
5. York Steak House
Another heavyweight from the Brunswick Square Mall era.
Commenters remembered the cafeteria-style setup, steak dinners, and how it somehow became part of everyone’s childhood routine at the mall. York Steak House represented peak mall culture — something younger generations probably can’t fully understand today.
6. Victoria Station
This one brought out a different kind of nostalgia.
People remembered the train-car theme, the salad bar, and the atmosphere more than anything else. It felt upscale back then — the kind of place families celebrated birthdays, anniversaries, and big occasions.
Several commenters specifically mentioned it as one of the most unique restaurants East Brunswick ever had.
7. Mickey’s Donuts
If there was one place people remembered by smell alone, it was Mickey’s.
Commenters talked about stopping there before school, grabbing donuts on weekend mornings, and how nothing today compares to those classic Boston cream donuts.
For longtime residents, Mickey’s wasn’t just a donut shop. It was part of their routine growing up in EB.
8. Two Guys, Bradlees, Woolco, and the Lost Department Store Era
One of the strongest themes in the comments wasn’t just one store — it was an entire era of retail.
People missed:
- Two Guys
- Bradlees
- Woolco
- K-Mart
- Loehmann’s
- Rag Shop
- The Wiz
- Crazy Eddie
- BEST
- Newberry’s
Before online shopping and giant lifestyle centers, Route 18 was packed with stores people genuinely loved visiting.
Shopping in East Brunswick used to feel like an experience.
9. Mid-State Bowl and the Entertainment Era
Bowling alleys, arcades, hobby shops, and game stores came up constantly:
- Mid-State Bowl
- Fun N Games
- Sports N Stuff
- Discovery Zone
- Meyers Hobby Shop
- Record Setter
- Kay-Bee Toys
- Toys “R” Us
A lot of commenters remembered East Brunswick as the place kids begged their parents to take them on weekends.
10. The Brunswick Square Mall Itself
This may have actually been the real winner.
Over and over, people simply answered:
- “The mall.”
- “The original mall.”
- “Everything in the mall in the 80s.”
That says a lot.
People weren’t only nostalgic for one business. They missed what East Brunswick represented during that era: energy, activity, excitement, and community.
When East Brunswick Was the Place to Be
Reading through the comments, one thing became crystal clear:
People from surrounding towns looked at East Brunswick differently back then.
Route 18 was booming. Brunswick Square Mall was packed. Restaurants were full every weekend. There were unique local businesses everywhere. You could spend an entire Saturday in town without leaving Route 18.
People came here for:
- shopping
- entertainment
- date nights
- family dinners
- movies
- arcades
- bowling
- specialty stores
- flea markets
- ice cream
- donuts
- music stores
- toy stores
East Brunswick felt ahead of its time.
And maybe what people miss most isn’t just the buildings.
It’s the feeling that the town was constantly alive.
But Maybe East Brunswick Is Turning a Corner Again
What makes this conversation interesting is that it doesn’t just feel nostalgic.
There’s also optimism.
Because for the first time in a while, there’s a feeling that East Brunswick is starting to rebuild some of that energy again.
New businesses are opening. Major redevelopment projects are moving forward. The long-awaited hockey rink project has generated real excitement. New restaurants and retail concepts continue coming into town. Areas that sat quiet for years are finally seeing movement again.
No, it won’t look exactly like the East Brunswick of the 70s or 80s.
It can’t.
But maybe that’s not the point.
The point is that people still care deeply about this town. The reaction to the post proved that. Hundreds of comments weren’t just about missing old places — they were about wanting East Brunswick to feel vibrant again.
And maybe that’s already starting to happen.
The Real Takeaway
The most powerful part of the entire thread wasn’t the businesses people named.
It was how instantly everyone connected over shared memories.
A donut shop.
A steakhouse.
A flea market.
A drive-in theater.
An ice cream parlour in the mall.
These places became part of people’s lives. And decades later, they still matter enough for hundreds of residents to talk about them like they closed yesterday.
That says something important about East Brunswick.
The town mattered then.



