Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Stephen Avenue is a major pedestrian mall in downtown Calgary, Alberta, Canada. The mall is the portion of 8 Avenue SW between 4 Street SW and 1 Street SE. It is open to vehicles only from 6:00 p.m. to 6:00 a.m. The street is known for some of Calgary's finest restaurants, cafés, pubs and bars.
Edo Japan, often known simply as Edo (/ ˈ iː d oʊ /), is an Australian-founded Canadian fast food restaurant chain specializing in Japanese Teppan-style cooking. [2] Founded in 1979 in Sydney, Australia by Reverend Susumu Ikuta, [3] a Japanese Buddhist minister, Edo Japan was named after the original name of Tokyo. [4]
The following is a list of Canada's largest enclosed shopping malls, by reported total retail floor space, or gross leasable area (GLA) with 750,000 square feet (70,000 m 2) and over.
Mary Brown's operated mainly in Newfoundland (about 20 locations with 2 locations in Halifax and 1 in Ontario) until the late 1970s, when it began expanding in Ontario, Alberta and Nova Scotia. In 2010, there were 38 locations in Newfoundland and Labrador, 30 locations in Ontario, 12 in Alberta and 3 in Nova Scotia, for an approximate total of 83.
It is the hub of downtown Calgary's +15 skywalk system, and as such is the busiest shopping centre in the city by pedestrian count, with around 250,000 visitors passing through each week. [3] The centre's architectural focal point is a vast suspended glass skylight which spans the length of the complex.
The first Joey Restaurant was opened in 1992 in Calgary, Alberta.The chain now operates over thirty restaurants. [5] [6]The company's founding President and CEO is Jeff Fuller, son of restaurateur Leroy "Bus" Fuller (1928-2019), [7] who founded the Earls restaurant chain with Jeff's brother Stan Fuller. [8]
Stephen Avenue Place is an office and retail hub in The CORE in downtown Calgary, Alberta, Canada.Located at 700 2nd Street SW, it stands at 155 metres (509 feet) or 41-storeys tall and was the tallest building in Calgary at the time of its completion.
CrossIron Mills is located in Rocky View County, on the southeast corner of the QEII Highway (the Calgary-Edmonton Corridor) and Highway 566. [3]CrossIron Mills. As of July 2007, when the City of Calgary expanded its boundaries, this places the property just outside the city limits, as well as just outside the hamlet boundaries of Balzac (Highway 566 links to 176th Avenue N.E. in Calgary).