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As of the 2024 Michelin Guide, there are 10 restaurants in Vancouver with a Michelin-star rating. [1] The Michelin Guides have been published by the French tire company Michelin since 1900. They were designed as a guide to tell drivers about eateries they recommended to visit and to subtly sponsor their tires, by encouraging drivers to use ...
Nearer to Burrard Bridge is located St. Paul's Hospital, established on Burrard Street in 1894. Burrard Street served as the dividing line between the two district lots laid out on the downtown peninsula in the second half of the 19th century: District Lot 185 (now West End) and District Lot 541 (granted to the Canadian Pacific Railway). [4]
In his 2016 review of the Washington Street location, Willamette Week 's Matthew Korfhage wrote, "Like an old punk rocker who now works in marketing, craft-pasta spot Grassa has aged surprisingly gracefully. The restaurant's rough edges—unpredictable tunes at unpredictable volume, dining-room staff with occasional kitchen manners—have ...
Hawksworth Restaurant St. Lawrence. This is a list of notable restaurants in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. ... Wildlight Kitchen + Bar This page was last ...
The McBarge anchored in Burrard Inlet near Vancouver, British Columbia, in 2006 49°11′03″N 122°34′10″W / 49.184193°N 122.569430°W / 49.184193; -122.569430 The McBarge , officially named the Friendship 500 , is a former McDonald's restaurant, built on a 187-foot-long (57 m) [ 1 ] barge for Expo '86 in Vancouver , British ...
Bentall 5 or Five Bentall Centre is a 35-floor skyscraper located at 550 Burrard Street in Downtown Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. it stands at 140 m (459 ft), [3] making it the 12th-tallest building in the city. The building was constructed in two phases, with the first 22 floors completed by the end of 2002 and the 23rd to 35th floors ...
By the mid-1970s, a combination of cultural assimilation, non-Italian immigration, movement to the suburbs, and a schism within the Italian community [citation needed] led to the decline of Italian influence and concentration in Little Italy. Today, the area is again a vibrant cultural and business centre in eastern Vancouver, but after a ...
In 1895, streetcar tracks were laid down the street, supporting a concentration of shops and restaurants. From the early to middle-late 20th century, and especially after significant immigration from postwar Germany, the northwest end of Robson Street was known as a centre of German culture and commerce in Vancouver, earning the nickname Robsonstrasse, even among non-Germans (this name lives ...