Mini diners from the Tastee Diner.

/ Rasmus Auctions

If you have not quite overcome the loss of Silver Spring’s 80-plus year old Tastee Diner, here’s some consolation: everything from the diner is now available at an online auction.

Tastee Diner closed abruptly on March 22 to make way for a new mixed-use development. Owner Gene Wilkes told DCist/WAMU at the time that the made the decision to sell to focus on his personal health. Other locations of Tastee Diner in Bethesda and Laurel remain open.

The auction truly has everything: from framed artwork, knickknacks, and photos of the diner over the years to less sentimental items such as cutlery, patio furniture, a huge grill or two or three, the freezers, the storage cabinets, the sinks, the stand mixer, the TV’s, wet floor signs and a stack of takeout cups.

If you’re so inclined and have the money to spare, you can basically recreate the diner in your home, right down to the booths and neon “Open 24 Hours” sign. The auction closes on May 17, so you have about a week to get that plan into action.

The Tastee, which opened in 1935 and served burgers and breakfast for more than eight decades, was named a Montgomery County Historic Landmark in 1994. Like many diners in the early 1900s, it was designed to look like a railroad car. The Jerry O’Mahoney Diner Company assembled that design for the diner on its former site in Silver Spring in 1946.

D.C. developer Roadside Development, which has purchased the Tastee Diner property at 711 Ramsey Ave. and an adjacent lot in order to build a mixed use development, has said it will incorporate the original dining car building in its development plans.