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The station was decommissioned in 1968. From 1974 to 2002, the space was used for a restaurant and bar, also known as Engine House No. 5. In 2004, the building was converted for office use, and today is the Columbus branch of Big Red Rooster, a marketing company.
A chic new restaurant, the Camargo Room, was added on the store's sixth floor in time for the 1964 Christmas Season, replacing the more traditional Rose Room on the third floor. Similar to Lord & Taylor's Birdcage Restaurants, ads promoting the restaurant made it clear that the Camargo Room was a new, modern style of department store dining far ...
Petits fours come in three varieties: Glacé ("glazed"), iced or decorated tiny cakes covered in fondant or icing, such as small éclairs, and tartlets; Salé ("salted"), savory bite-sized appetizers usually served at cocktail parties or buffets; Sec ("dry"), dainty biscuits, baked meringues, macarons, and puff pastries
The Downtown building and the four businesses she plans to start in it are her own venture, though. She bought the State Street building in August 2023 for $422,506 by obtaining a Small Business ...
Marzetti's became a local favorite especially among Ohio State University students, and grew to become a four star restaurant. Customers particularly enjoyed Teresa's Johnny Marzetti, a pasta dish named for her brother-in-law, as well as her homemade salad dressings. By 1955, Marzetti's upstairs kitchen of the restaurant became a full-scale ...
The restaurant was best-known for its "Mystery Drink", a cocktail served in a bowl with a "smoking volcano" in its center. The Mystery Drink served four people and had eight ounces of rum and brandy. It was always served by the "Mystery Girl", a server summoned with a gong, and who only appeared to dance the drink to diners' tables.
Engine House No. 12 is a former fire station in the Olde Towne East neighborhood of Columbus, Ohio.Today it primarily houses Gemüt Biergarten, a German restaurant, brewery, and biergarten, with its second story used for offices. [2]
Bar signage c. 1970s. Ringside Café is situated on Pearl Alley in Downtown Columbus. The alley and neighboring Lynn Street contain numerous restaurants and historic buildings amid skyscraper office buildings, near the Rhodes State Office Tower, the tallest building in Columbus, and behind the Hayden Building on Capitol Square. [7]