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Empress Tea Lounge and Bar, Now "The Lounge" The Salamander Washington DC is a luxury Postmodernist-style hotel located at 1330 Maryland Ave SW, Washington, D.C. The hotel is an AAA-rated four diamond and Forbes Travel Guide rated four stars. From 2004 to 2022 it operated as the Mandarin Oriental Washington, D.C..
The stays include room service for pets, 24-hour butlers, helicopter rides and shopping sprees. One of the most expensive is the Salamander DC package totaling a whopping $244,700 for four nights.
The Attic was a popular 1,200 seat Smörgåsbord restaurant in West Vancouver, British Columbia that was open from 1968 to 1981. [1] The owners were former Vancouver alderman Frank Baker (1922–1989) and his wife Dorothy. [2] Head shot of Alderman Baker, the co-owner of The Attic, circa 1958.
The Vancouver Michelin Guide first launched on October 27, 2022, [2] funded in partnership with Destination Vancouver for a five-year period. [3] Vancouver is one of three regions Michelin reviews in Canada, alongside Toronto (which was also added in 2022) and Quebec (which will have its inaugural guide in 2025). [4]
Rasika has been called "one of the most exciting Indian restaurants in the country" by Condé Nast Traveler, [7] and the city's best restaurant by The Washington Post. [4] In 2023, Rasika was included in Washingtonian 's overview of the 100 "very best" restaurants, [5] and Tierney Plumb included the business in Eater Washington, D.C. 's list of sixteen "must-try" Indian restaurants in the ...
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Like all of Vancouver, the West End was originally a forested wilderness. The area was purchased in 1862 by John Morton, Samuel Brighouse, and William Hailstone, three men known as the "Three Greenhorn Englishmen", or just the "Three Greenhorns", a nickname they earned from others who thought they were buying a massive plot of wild land at an inflated price. [3]
Beginning in the 1800s, Ambleside was the main commercial centre of the community of West Vancouver. In 1886, "Navvy" Jack Thomas initiated the first ferry service between Vancouver and West Vancouver via the Ambleside waterfront, which lasted only one year. [ 2 ]