Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The first McDonald's location was opened by Richard and Maurice McDonald in San Bernardino, California in 1940 and demolished in 1972, although part of the sign remains. The oldest McDonald's still in operation is the third one built, in Downey, California , which opened in 1953.
1974: On November 13, the first McDonald's in the United Kingdom opened in Woolwich, south-east London. It is the 3000th McDonald's restaurant. [61] 1976: The first McDonald's in Switzerland, on Rue du Mont-Blanc in Geneva. [62] 1979: The first McDonald's in Singapore opens at Liat Towers in Orchard Road. It is also Southeast Asia's first ...
Menu Explodes. For years, McDonald’s was known as the place for burgers, fries and shakes. Today, the ever-expanding menu includes hundreds of options with featured favorites including the Big ...
The site of the first franchised McDonald's restaurant in Phoenix, Arizona, opened in 1953 or 1954, [9] is now a Yoshi’s. [10] [11] An early McDonald's stood at 9100 SE Powell Boulevard in Portland, Oregon, on Southeast 91st Avenue and Powell Boulevard. It was not attached to the adjacent McDonald's but was available for party rentals.
This McDonald's location, however, was built inside a preexisting, 150-year-old colonial mansion. Look inside one of the fanciest McDonald's restaurants in the world, built inside a 150-year-old ...
The PlayPlace is an amusement commercial playground attached to a McDonald's restaurant. It features play areas such as tube mazes, slides, ball pits, and video games, as well as tables for eating. First established in 1971 at the Chula Vista, California location, they are usually rainbow colored and themed after McDonaldland. [1]
McDonald’s isn’t the only chain that's testing a drive-thru-only location. In August, Chick-fil-A started testing a new two-story restaurant that has four drive-thru lanes and no dining services.
McDonald's Video Game is a Flash game published and developed by the Italy-based group Molleindustria in 2006. [1] It is described as an "anti-advergame", meaning a satire of various companies and its business practices. [2] It has also been classified as a newsgame or an editorial game by Ian Bogost.