America's busiest restaurant is gone. Now its family home is for sale

The expansive Massachusetts estate, once owned by the family behind America’s former top-grossing restaurant, has been successfully sold, closing another chapter for the lineage that turned a modest Route 1 steakhouse into a New England landmark.

For over fifty years, Hilltop Steak House in Lynnfield attracted diners from all over the Northeast to its vast Saugus location. Patrons often queued for hours under a colossal 64-foot cactus sign and amidst a collection of fiberglass cows, all waiting to experience the famed establishment.

During its heyday, the restaurant could accommodate approximately 1,500 guests, employed more than 600 staff members, and generated millions in annual revenue.

According to a 1987 Boston Globe article, Hilltop was reportedly the top-earning restaurant in the nation, raking in $26.9 million a year from the dining establishment alone, with total earnings hitting around $45 million when including its butcher shop.

Now, almost 13 years after Hilltop served its last dish, the family’s longtime residence—an exuberant 1970s treasure trove adorned with chandeliers, bespoke wallpapers, and hidden gems—has been listed for sale by The George Sarkis Group.

“We were thrilled with the family that bought it,” shared Santina “Tina” Primavera, daughter of Hilltop founders Frank and Irene Giuffrida, with the Daily Mail. “They understand the history and are eager to preserve it.”

The five-bedroom home was built in 1973 during Hilltop’s heyday, when Frank Giuffrida’s steakhouse empire was growing into what many considered a Route 1 landmark.

But Giuffrida’s rise was far from guaranteed.

Hilltop Steak House grew into one of America’s busiest restaurants, drawing crowds from across New England for steaks, lobster pie and giant portions

Customers stand around with drinks in hand from the outer bar while waiting for a table at the Hilltop Steakhouse in Saugus, Massachusetts, July 14, 1978

Irene Giuffrida’s ornate pink bathroom features Roman columns, mirrored walls and a chandelier above the bathtub

Born into a family of butchers, he left school at a young age after his father died and began cutting meat to help support his family. 

After a brief stint in California, he returned to Massachusetts and purchased a small bar on Route 1.

He soon grew tired of the bar business and envisioned something larger.

After marrying Irene, the couple transformed the property into a restaurant, working side by side to build what would become one of the most successful independent steakhouses in America.

‘My mother never worked so hard in her life,’ Tina told the Daily Mail. ‘The two of them built what it was as a team.’

The concept was simple: generous portions, reasonable prices and a dining experience unlike anything else on Route 1.

Frank wanted the biggest sign on the highway and got it. The giant cactus became one of the most recognizable landmarks in Massachusetts. 

Fiberglass cows grazed outside and dining rooms were named after Western cities inspired by his love of John Wayne films.

Left to Right: Gina Giuffrida, Irene Giuffrida, Frank Giuffrida and Tina Giuffrida Primavera

The home’s lavish bedrooms remained largely untouched for decades, turning the property into a 1970s time capsule 

Elegant furnishings and pink accents showcased the decorating style that made Irene Giuffrida’s Lynnfield home a viral sensation decades later 

Floor-to-ceiling drapes and custom furnishings helped make the home’s sunken living room one of its most striking spaces 

Every room in the mansion featured its own distinctive palette, turning the property into a vibrant 1970s time capsule.

The home’s custom billiards room featured Tiffany-style pendant lights and was one of Frank Giuffrida’s favorite gathering spots

The home’s retro gym, complete with orange workout equipment and mirrored walls

Inside, the operation ran like what Tina described as ‘a perfect oiled machine.’

There was a dedicated salad room, a room where employees spent entire shifts wrapping baked potatoes in foil, multiple kitchens and a butcher shop designed like a giant walk-in refrigerator.

‘People would come back in droves,’ Tina recalled.

During the restaurant’s busiest years in the 1980s, customers regularly waited up to two hours for a table. Police officers were needed to help manage crowds and escort cashiers carrying large amounts of money from registers to counting rooms.

The upstairs bar alone became the highest-grossing bar in New England, despite serving no food.

Among Hilltop’s most famous menu items were its filet mignon, beef cutlets, lobster pie and the restaurant’s signature salad dressing –  a product the family now hopes to bring back decades after the restaurant’s closure.

The beginning of the end came when Frank sold the business while it was still thriving.

Believing the restaurant could expand further under new ownership, he sold Hilltop but retained ownership of the land. Tina said subsequent owners failed to maintain the standards that had made the restaurant famous.

Frank Giuffrida is pictured outside the Hilltop Steak House in 1978

The colorful man cave became one of the home’s most popular gathering spots, where Frank and his friends would play poker

The mansion featured three separate kitchens, including this retro space that remained largely unchanged for decades

One of three kitchens inside the mansion

By 2013, Hilltop had closed after 52 years in business.

Yet demand never disappeared.

On the restaurant’s final night, customers drove from across New England to eat there one last time, creating waits of up to three hours.

‘It just shows you that it didn’t have to close,’ Tina said.

While the restaurant is gone, its giant cactus sign still stands over Route 1, refurbished but unmistakably recognizable to generations of diners.

Just 15 minutes away sits the family’s Lynnfield home.

Built after Frank spotted the partially framed property while driving through town, the residence reflected the same larger-than-life personality that made Hilltop famous.

The home featured three kitchens, a heated driveway, a custom pool table bearing Frank’s initials, a three-story closet built for Irene and an enormous chandelier that family lore says Frank purchased after learning John Wayne was interested in buying it.

Hilltop Steakhouse waitress Charlene Lever holds a pair of Red Sox tickets that she received as a tip from a benevolent patron in 2006

Customers dine inside Hilltop Steak House during its heyday as the Route 1 landmark became one of the highest-grossing restaurants in America

A server carries plates through Hilltop Steak House, which once seated roughly 1,500 diners and employed more than 600 workers

The restaurant's iconic fiberglass cows became nearly as famous as the food itself, greeting diners along Route 1 for decades

The restaurant’s iconic fiberglass cows became nearly as famous as the food itself, greeting diners along Route 1 for decades

‘I really appreciate it now,’ Tina said.

After Irene’s death last year, granddaughter Caterina Primavera began posting videos of the house to TikTok

The clips quickly attracted millions of views from people fascinated by its untouched 1970s décor.

‘It makes me feel so happy because I feel like I can tell their story again,’ Caterina told Daily Mail. ‘Their stories are still alive.’

The videos revealed details even family members had overlooked, including carved horoscope symbols on bar handles and a hallway carpet woven with Frank and Irene’s initials.

As the family prepared the property for sale, winter ice damage forced them to remove some of the home’s original wallpaper and drapery, though many of its distinctive features remain.

For Tina, selling the house is bittersweet.

The family spent one final holiday season there after Irene’s death, gathering for Halloween, Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Year’s Eve and the Super Bowl before putting it on the market.

‘It was a happy home,’ she said. The family did not disclose who the buyers were or how much it sold for.

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