the railway cafe | winchester, va
Where Food Meets Purpose
The Railway Café is a fully operational restaurant that serves as a work experience and job training site for survivors of domestic and sexual violence.
MONDAY to FRIDAY 7:00 AM – 3:00 PM
SATURDAY- Closed
SUNDAY – Closed
Welcome The Railway Cafe
A place to gather. A place to grow.
The Railway Café is a welcoming neighborhood café where good food, great coffee, and community connection come together. Located in a restored freight building, we offer thoughtfully prepared breakfast and lunch, locally sourced ingredients, and a warm space to linger, meet, and connect.
Behind every cup of coffee and every meal served is a deeper purpose: creating opportunity, dignity, and pathways to independence through meaningful work.
Start your day the Railway way — fresh, flavorful, and made just for you!
Dig into these delicious dishes, served with a side of love from the Railway Café!
The Railway Café is a fully operational restaurant that serves as a work experience and job training site for survivors of domestic and sexual violence.
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Historic Train Station
The Railway Café operates out of a restored Civil War era freight building—once a vital hub of movement, industry, and connection during a defining period in our nation’s history. For generations, this building supported the flow of goods through the region, quietly serving the community through times of change, conflict, and growth.
Today, that legacy continues in a new and meaningful way. Thoughtfully renovated, the building has been reimagined as a place where people gather, skills are built, and new beginnings take shape. The renovation was recognized by the Northern Virginia Chapter of the American Institute of Architects with an award for Responsible Design in Historic Architecture—honoring a project that successfully preserved the building’s historic integrity while adapting it for meaningful community use.
In 2019, The Laurel Center purchased the building with a clear and intentional vision: to transform a historic structure into a workforce training site that could help break one of the most persistent barriers facing survivors of abuse—economic insecurity. Survivors often return to unsafe situations not because they want to, but because stable employment and financial independence feel out of reach. By creating a real-world training environment rooted in dignity, skill-building, and opportunity, The Railway Café directly addresses this critical gap.
Built during the Civil War era as a place of movement and industry, this historic freight building has long served as a quiet backbone of the community. Today, under the stewardship of The Laurel Center, it stands as a powerful example of what is possible when history and purpose align. What once moved freight now helps move lives forward toward safety and independence—a future defined not by survival but by possibility.













