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Canadian Pacific Plaza is a 383-ft (117 m) tall skyscraper in Minneapolis, Minnesota. It was completed in 1960 and has 28 floors. It is the 21st-tallest building in the city. It is the first major post-World War II skyscraper built in Minneapolis. It is also the city's tallest building completed in the 1960s.
Follow the neon sign to this steakhouse that's been serving downtown Minneapolis since the 1940s. An icon of the city's dining scene, this is the spot for a famous butter knife steak, or even just ...
This article is missing information about type of restaurant, cuisine, notable history and chefs, additional achievements and awards (if any). Please expand the article to include this information. Further details may exist on the talk page. (September 2024)
Hard Times was founded as a 24-hour cafe in 1992 by eight employees of The Cafe Expatriate, a failing restaurant at that location. Working with the vision of a place where all kinds of people could come together to drink coffee and eat vegetarian food, they transformed the restaurant into what is now Hard Times. [1]
A new beer garden and restaurant complex is opening soon on Hilton Head’s south end. The Bank will be located in the former Bank of America building at 59 Pope Ave.
Ocean Park was once a station on the Ilwaco Railway and Navigation Company, a narrow gauge railroad that ran along the Long Beach Peninsula from 1889 to 1930. [5] One of the oldest buildings in Pacific County is the Taylor Hotel building, built in 1887, currently in use as Adelaide's Cafe and Bookstore named after Adelaide Taylor, [6] the wife of the original hotel owner.
For most of its history, the North Loop was an industrial area. It was home to a large railroad yard and numerous warehouses and factories. Much of the warehouse district (very roughly bounded by Second Street North, First Avenue North, Sixth Street North, and the BNSF Railway tracks, except for the Interstate 394 and Interstate 94 ramps) is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
The Dakota moved to Downtown Minneapolis in 2003. [2] The Dino's Greek fast-food chain also had its first year-round restaurant at Bandana Square (previously, the company had only set up stands at the Minnesota State Fair and other events). The center was purchased by the Saint Paul-based Wilder Foundation in 1983 for $17 million. [2]