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AP Restaurant is a restaurant in Toronto, Ontario, Canada that occupies the highest outdoor patio in the city, [citation needed] on the 51st floor of the Manulife Centre at 55 Bloor Street West. [1] [2] The space was formerly occupied by Panorama Lounge. [2] Owned by Eatertainment, The One Eighty opened in 2015.
It later was bought by Jules Fine, and became a restaurant named Julie's Mansion, with the Bombay Bicycle Club existing on the top floor. After Fine suffered a stroke, the grounds were sold off and the greenhouses demolished and replaced with a service station. In 1976, it became home to a The Keg restaurant, and it was renamed the Keg Mansion.
Symposium Cafe Restaurant & Lounge is a restaurant chain in the Canadian province of Ontario, [3] which serves as an all-day restaurant, café, and bar. [4] The first restaurant was founded in 1996 [5] [6] in the City of London by Bill and Terry Argo. They began franchising in 2004, and had thirty locations as of the end of 2017. [7]
Cloud 9 Revolving Restaurant & Lounge, Empire Landmark Hotel, Vancouver (closed in 2017; building demolished 2018–2019) Top of Vancouver Revolving Restaurant, Harbour Centre, Vancouver; Vistas Revolving Restaurant & Bar, Pinnacle Hotel Harbourfront, Vancouver (closed, now private convention space) [3] Manitoba
The Riverboat Coffee House was a Canadian coffeehouse located at 134 Yorkville Avenue in the Yorkville neighbourhood of Toronto, Ontario, Canada.It was a key venue for folk rock music and singer songwriter music made famous for featuring high-profile acts, and is considered to be "the best-known coffee house in Canada."
The Lakeview Restaurant is a diner [3] located at 1132 Dundas Street West [4] in the Trinity Bellwoods neighbourhood of Toronto. [5] It was built in 1932 [6] and features a neon sign that reads "Always Open", the diner started 24-hour-a-day operations to serve shift workers at a nearby Massey Ferguson factory. [7] 24-hour opening stopped in ...
The Toronto Star argued that the inaugural 2022 guide failed to capture the full diversity of Toronto restaurants, being overly represented by Japanese cuisine and downtown restaurants. [15] The Star also publishes its own alternative restaurant guide that it argues better captures Toronto's food scene, released around the same time as the ...
Ben Castanie and Aurelia Peynet opened Snakes & Lattes on August 30, 2010 [6] [8] at what later became known as Snakes & Lattes' Annex location. The couple had moved to Toronto from France four years earlier, and came up with the idea for Snakes & Lattes, which they named after the Snakes and Ladders board game, from a visit to a Chicago area game store in 2008. [5]