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Rialto was a restaurant in Harvard Square’s Charles Hotel owned by Jody Adams and Michela Larson. [2] Opened in 1994, it closed on June 22, 2016. [3] Originally, it was announced she would leave the restaurant in the hands of executive chef David Ladner, but it was later announced it would close down.
The Tasty was a tiny one-room diner and lunch counter, its customer area no more than seven feet wide and thirty feet deep, with a narrow counter made of yellow linoleum. A Harvard Business School student once deemed it "the most profitable restaurant in New England per sq ft", at 210 sq ft (20 m 2). The Tasty had 14 stools.
Harvest is a Harvard Square restaurant originally owned in 1975 by Benjamin Thompson (architect) (he designed it as well) and his wife Jane. They closed in 1997 because of “growing competition and poor management” but reopened under new management [1] (past managers R. Patrick Bowe and Jayne Bowe) [2] and renovations by Elkus Manfredi. [1]
A 2012 performance by Archers of Loaf at The Middle East. Charlie's Kitchen, which serves burgers, "double lobster rolls", frappes, and beer; [1] considered one of the last vestiges of the "old" 1950s-era Harvard Square.
Charlie's Kitchen's jukebox has won the Boston Phoenix’s reader-polled "Best of Boston Award for Best Jukebox" for the past five years, most recently in 2010. [6] It also won The Improper Bostonian's Boston's Best Bar for the Harvard Square Neighborhood in 2010 [7] and the Weekly Dig's Dig This Award for Best Outdoor dining in 2009.
Grendel's Den is a bar and restaurant in Harvard Square in Cambridge, Massachusetts, located at 89 Winthrop Street. The establishment is frequented by both students and professors of Harvard University as well as many others from the Cambridge and Boston area. The name was a reference to Grendel, the antagonist in the Old English epic Beowulf.
After opening a spacious Harvard Square location in 2016, Or began ramping up expansion in the Boston area. [10] Tatte expanded into downtown Boston in 2019 with its Summer Street location, followed by a location at One Boston Place. [11] Ron Shaich, then CEO of Panera Bread, purchased over 50% ownership of Tatte in 2016. [12]
Waldorf Lunch, Harvard Square, 1918 Interior, Harvard Square, 1913 tile The Harvard Square location opened in 1913 and closed in 1938, when it became a Hayes-Bickford cafeteria. In 2017, when the space was being renovated to become a branch of the local Clover Food Lab chain, the original Waldorf decor, with college pennants in tile, was exposed.