
The building at 4701 S. Broadway sold to the owner of a nearby car dealership. (Hayden Kim/BusinessDen)
In Englewood, a royal retail property has a new king.
The 1,725-square-foot retail building at 4701 S. Broadway sold last month to Mohammad Khater for $705,000, public records show. The property was home for 64 years to Frank The Pizza King, a restaurant that closed a few weeks before the real estate deal was completed.
Khater owns the Crown Auto car lot a couple blocks away on Broadway. He did not respond to multiple requests for comment.
Despite operating at the site for decades, the pizzeria did not own its real estate. The seller in the deal was a family trust that owned the property since before Pizza King opened.
The tiny building on South Broadway was constructed in 1959 and sits on about a third of an acre.
The pizza joint received a community outpouring of support when it announced its impending closure in April. It raised over $10,000 on GoFundMe toward launching a new location elsewhere.
No one from the business responded to requests for comment. The business’s most recent social media posts are about selling T-shirts and restaurant equipment.

The building at 4701 S. Broadway sold to the owner of a nearby car dealership. (Hayden Kim/BusinessDen)
In Englewood, a royal retail property has a new king.
The 1,725-square-foot retail building at 4701 S. Broadway sold last month to Mohammad Khater for $705,000, public records show. The property was home for 64 years to Frank The Pizza King, a restaurant that closed a few weeks before the real estate deal was completed.
Khater owns the Crown Auto car lot a couple blocks away on Broadway. He did not respond to multiple requests for comment.
Despite operating at the site for decades, the pizzeria did not own its real estate. The seller in the deal was a family trust that owned the property since before Pizza King opened.
The tiny building on South Broadway was constructed in 1959 and sits on about a third of an acre.
The pizza joint received a community outpouring of support when it announced its impending closure in April. It raised over $10,000 on GoFundMe toward launching a new location elsewhere.
No one from the business responded to requests for comment. The business’s most recent social media posts are about selling T-shirts and restaurant equipment.