- Roadhouse (facility)
Australia
A roadhouse is a
service station in a rural area specifically aimed to service passing traffic on a major intercity route. A roadhouse sells fuel and provides maintenance and repairs for cars, but also has an attached "restaurant" (more like a café) serving hot food to travellers. Roadhouses usually serve astruck stop s - with space to parksemi-trailer truck s and buses - as well as cars. In remote areas such as theNullarbor Plain , a roadhouse also offersmotel -style accommodation and camping facilities.USA and Canada
A local
inn orrestaurant , the "roadhouse" or "road house" commonly refers to an establishment that serves meals, especially in the evenings, and has a bar serving beer or hard liquor, and which features music and dancing for entertainment. Most roadhouses are located along highways or roads in rural areas or on the outskirts of towns. Early roadhouses provided lodging for travellers, but, with the advent of motels in the early 20th century, few now have rooms available. Roadhouses have a slightly disreputable image similar tohonkytonk s.Roadhouses were portrayed in movies including "
The Wild One " and "Easy Rider ".Alaska and the Yukon
From the 1890s [http://www.nps.gov/yuch/Expanded/roadhouses/roadhouses.htm] , roadhouses were checkpoints where dog drivers (mushers, or
dog sled ders); horse-drivensled s; and people onsnowshoe s, skis, or walking; would stop overnight for shelter and a hot meal. Remains of a roadhouse can be seen today south ofCarmacks, Yukon along theKlondike Highway . [http://www.blackrapids.org/history.htm Black Rapids Roadhouse]ee also
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Roadhouse (disambiguation page)
*Fast food restaurant
*Toilet hygieneReferences
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