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Park City High School Mechanical Arts building, September 2012. The district includes 47 contributing buildings on 13 acres (5.3 ha) along most of Park City's Main Street through its business section, plus part of Heber Avenue. All were built after the fire of June 19, 1898.
Novi Town Center is an open-air shopping center located at Novi Road and Grand River in Novi, Michigan, USA, in Metro Detroit. [1] Owned by CBRE , [ 2 ] the center is on Interstate 96 , with the Twelve Oaks Mall on the other side of the road.
Park City Main Street Historic District, Park City, Utah, NRHP-listed in Summit County Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Park City Historic District .
The route travels north through The Colony, where it is known locally as Main Street, and into Frisco. [3] It briefly skirts the eastern edge of Little Elm before reentering Frisco and ending at US 380. [1] South of FM423 the road is signed as Josey Lane, a major north–south thoroughfare through the cities of Carrollton and Farmers Branch.
The Egyptian Theatre is located at 328 Main Street in Park City, Utah in the United States. It has also been referred to as the Mary J. Steiner Egyptian Theatre or Egyptian Theatre in Park City and is built in the style of Egyptian-themed theatres from the 1920s that followed the discovery of the tomb of Tutankhamun.
Park Theatre or Park Theater may refer to: Historic theatres. Park Theatre (Boston), Massachusetts (1879-1990) Park Theatre (Brooklyn), New York (1860-1908) Park Theatre (Manhattan) (the "Old Drury"), New York (1798-1848) Park Theatre, New York City (1911-1923, 1935-1944), built in 1903 as Majestic Theatre (Columbus Circle) Current theatres
Morris Performing Arts Center (originally Palace Theatre and formerly Morris Civic Auditorium) is a 2,564-seat concert hall located in South Bend, Indiana. It opened in 1922 as a vaudeville house and later became a movie palace. It was developed along with the neighboring Palais Royale Building by the Palace Theater
In 1879, it was taken over by producer J.H. Haverly who renamed it Haverly's 14th Street Theatre. By the mid-1880s, it had become simply the Fourteenth Street Theatre. [3] By the mid-1910s, it was being used as a movie theatre, until actress Eva Le Gallienne made it the home of her stage company and renamed it to Civic Repertory Theatre in 1926.