Spaghetti Warehouse

Spaghetti Warehouse

🍽️ restaurant

Houston, Texas · Est. 1972

About This Location

Housed in a historic warehouse building in downtown Houston, this restaurant became famous not just for its Italian-American cuisine but for its resident ghosts. The building's history predates the restaurant, and the spirits seem to have stayed when the eatery moved in.

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The Ghost Story

The Spaghetti Warehouse in downtown Houston occupied a historic 1903 pharmaceutical warehouse that carried a tragic legacy within its exposed brick walls. The restaurant, which operated for decades before closing, became legendary not just for its Italian cuisine served in antique railcar booths, but for the restless spirits that seemed determined to make their presence known to staff and diners alike.

The primary haunting centers on a pharmacist who met his end in a devastating accident—falling down the building's elevator shaft during the structure's warehouse days. His spirit reportedly never accepted his sudden demise, and employees consistently reported inexplicable occurrences: dishes crashing from tables with no explanation, chairs sliding across the floor on their own, and the distinct sensation of being watched in the building's darker corners.

But the pharmacist did not walk alone. His grieving wife, unable to bear the loss, reportedly took her own life shortly after his accident. Her presence manifests differently—a cold, melancholic energy that staff associated with the women's restroom area. Female employees and patrons reported feeling sudden waves of profound sadness, hearing soft weeping, and catching glimpses of a woman in period dress reflected in mirrors.

The restaurant's vintage trolley car dining section proved particularly active. Guests seated in the antique railcar reported silverware rearranging itself, wine glasses sliding across tables, and the sensation of someone sitting beside them in otherwise empty booths. Children seemed especially attuned to the phenomena, often waving at or speaking to invisible companions.

Kitchen staff had their own encounters—burners igniting without human intervention, pots and pans clattering in locked storage areas, and ingredients moving between prep stations. The building's old freight elevator, site of the original tragedy, remained a focal point for paranormal activity, with its mechanisms occasionally activating despite being disconnected.

Researched from 5 verified sources including historical records, local archives, and paranormal research organizations. Learn about our research process.

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