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WOVEN JOINS ROY YAMAGUCHI & PUYALLUP TRIBE. A wood-fired grill anchors the expansive 15,000-square-foot waterfront restaurant that for more than 35 years was home to C.I. Shenanigans.Tacoma’s ...
The inaugural Puyallup Restaurant Week — a collaboration of several downtown businesses to draw attention downtown post-Fair — runs Oct. 2-6. Five restaurants on Meridian will offer special ...
Chef Yamaguchi is a pioneer of Hawaiian Regional Cuisine and creator of Roy’s Restaurants with footprints on several islands. He partnered with the Puyallup Tribe in 2022. Construction on the ...
Puyallup Indian Reservation: 4,000 18,061 Primarily northern Pierce County: Quileute Indian Reservation: 371 1,003.4 Southwestern portion of the Olympic Peninsula in Clallam County: Quinault Indian Nation: 2,535 208,150 Primarily the north coast of Grays Harbor County: Samish Indian Reservation: 1,835 79 (Samish also owns another ~130 acres of ...
Puyallup station is located on the north side of Main Avenue in downtown Puyallup, between 5th Street and Meridian Street. [1] It consists of two 600-foot (183 m) side platforms on the north and south sides of the two railroad tracks, along with several platform shelters that are shared with four bus bays, primarily on the north side, and a drop-off area. [2]
Puyallup School District; Puyallup station, a Sounder commuter rail station; Washington State Fair, formerly the Puyallup Fair; Puyallup River, a river in the U.S. state of Washington; Lake Puyallup, developed along the south edge of the Puget Sound Glacier; Puyallup Glacier, a glacier on the west flank of Mount Rainier in Washington; MV ...
Browne’s Irish Marketplace. Location: 3300 Pennsylvania Ave.. Year founded: 1887. Best known for: Reubens with cold pints of Guinness. The Irish imports shop and deli got its start in 1887. Ed ...
The original station building in 2017. The brick station was designed for the Missouri Pacific Railroad by the railroad's Chief Engineer E. M. Tucker and built in 1923. [2] The wooden depot built in 1865 which it replaced was moved and became the Missouri Pacific freight station. Both stations still stand.