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Prior to 1964, public accommodations in Phoenix and Arizona were segregated: African Americans were not allowed to stay in the hotels in downtown Phoenix. The structure, which is listed in the National register of Historic Places ref. number 95001081, is the only known surviving African-American boarding house in Phoenix.
The city of Phoenix is the location of 232 of these properties and districts, including 1 National Historic Landmark; they are listed here, while the remaining properties and districts and 2 National Historic Landmarks are located elsewhere in the county and are listed separately. Twenty properties in Phoenix were once listed, but have since ...
The Phoenix Historic Property Register is the official listing of the historic and prehistoric properties in the city of Phoenix, the capital and largest city, of the U.S. state of Arizona. [1] The city's register includes most or all places in Phoenix listed on the National Register of Historic Places and many more of local significance.
ON Semiconductor (Phoenix) OnTrac (Chandler) P.F. Chang's China Bistro (Scottsdale) Peter Piper Pizza (Phoenix) Ping Golf (Phoenix) Pure Flix Entertainment (Scottsdale) Rural Metro (Scottsdale) Salt River Project (Phoenix) Shamrock Farms (Phoenix) Tilted Kilt (Tempe) U-Haul (Phoenix) Universal Technical Institute (Phoenix) Versum Materials ...
MacAlpine's, the beloved Phoenix diner and soda fountain that opened in 1929, is at risk of closing forever. The restaurant has been closed for more than three years, since the start of the COVID ...
The Canadian locations are owned by a separate company, [6] the Old Spaghetti Factory Canada Ltd., based in Vancouver. [7] In 1983, the U.S. company opened an Old Spaghetti Factory in Hamburg, Germany, which was its 20th location. [8] The Hamburg restaurant was closed 10 years later, having been the chain's only European branch. [4]
Arizona Center was designed by The Rouse Company (on its festival marketplace model, which worked to great success in other cities) and opened in the fall of 1990 to great fanfare and high expectations, as it was considered one of the original components of the ongoing downtown revitalization efforts in Phoenix taking place since the early 1990s.
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