Residents tracking the property report that the damaged windows and wall have been rebuilt, and interior renovation work appears to be underway. No reopening date has been confirmed by the operator, but the visible progress has regulars anticipating a return.
The restaurant was shut down after a car struck the building, a scenario that has become a recurring threat to ground-floor businesses on high-traffic corridors across the city. The closure was not a business decision — it was a structural emergency. That distinction matters for a place that has persisted through the cycles that have emptied out much of the surrounding block.
New Lun Ting draws a loyal crowd for its no-frills approach: formica counters, cash transactions, and a short menu anchored by the crispy fried pork chops that have their own small following. It is the kind of operation where the overhead is low enough to survive, but a forced closure lasting months tests even the most established spots.
The operator has not made any public statement about the timeline. What the construction activity suggests is that the bet is still on.
That a place like this fights its way back after a literal wall gets knocked down says something about the durability of long-running family operations in Chinatown — not because the economics are easy, but because the operators tend not to quit.