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Here are some of the notable businesses that opened this year in Rochester. New nightclub and popular organic grocer among 17 notable openings in 2023 Skip to main content
Danny Deutsch, a bartender at the club, now owns Abilene nightclub. Tom Kohn, a Scorgie's regular during the club's peak, owns the Bop Shop music store. "We're all doing what we dreamed we wanted ...
A Rochester nightclub - that closed in 2022 - is reopening next month with back-to-back concerts by Joywave.
Throughout the 1950s and 60s the Pythodd was one of the most popular jazz venues in Western New York, rivaling major venues in New York City and across the country. [5] The Pythodd was located on the corner of Troup and Clarissa Streets in the thriving Black community of the Third Ward in the Southwest Quadrant of the city of Rochester.
The Dome Arena, a 4,086-seat indoor arena with 2,164 permanent seats and 25,000 square feet (2,300 m 2) of exhibit space.It was built in 1972 with what was at the time one of the largest self-supporting wooden roofs in the world, and was the home of the Rochester Zeniths of the Continental Basketball Association from 1978 to 1983.
The Main Street Armory is a multi-purpose arena located at 900 East Main Street in Rochester, New York. The Armory was built between 1904 and 1907 by the United States Army and was used for the training and processing of soldiers. Its main arena also hosted several non-military events, including high school basketball, circuses, and auto shows ...
The place was part of a smallish chain, and Rochester’s Jillian’s was the second to open in New York state. The club sponsored concerts at the High Falls festival site and hosted events like a ...
The Empire State Roar followed the Rochester Raptors of the National Women's Football Association (NWFA) and the Syracuse Sting of the WPFL both of which had folded in 2004. The Roar was established in 2005 by former Rochester Raptors and Syracuse Sting lineswoman Sandra Rogers, who was said to have merged the two teams into one.