Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Metropolitan was ranked as the best gay bar in New York by New York magazine in 2005 and 2008. [7] In 2015, New York ranked Metropolitan as the best gay bar in Brooklyn, calling it "a Grand Central Station for Brooklyn’s gay scene, with a lively roster of DJs, drag queens, and events that are always mixed and never exclusionary".
Astoria Boulevard branch. Queens Public Library operates three branches within Astoria: The Astoria branch at 14-01 Astoria Boulevard [70] The Broadway branch at 40-20 Broadway [71] The Steinway branch at 21-45 31st Street [72]
The Astoria branch was first opened on February 28, 1899, at 112 Fulton Avenue, Astoria, NY. In 1904, it moved to its current location at 1401 Astoria Boulevard. [2] 3: Auburndale: 25-55 Francis Lewis Boulevard, Flushing, NY 11358 The Auburndale branch first opened in 1930 at 199-10 32nd Avenue, Auburndale.
The Macon Library was the 11th Carnegie Brooklyn library. Mapleton Library 1702 60th Street Founded in the 1930s, the Mapleton branch moved to its present building in 1955. [44] Marcy Library 617 DeKalb Avenue Formally known as the Tompkins Park Free Library, this branch opened in the center of Tompkins Park on June 6, 1899. [6] McKinley Park ...
Steinway Street is a 2.4 mile two-way street that runs north-south between Berrian Boulevard in Astoria and Northern Boulevard in Long Island City. South of the Grand Central Parkway, Steinway Street is a major commercial district that is the primary section of a business improvement district called Steinway Astoria Partnership. [2]
The Bohemian Hall and Beer Garden has a big indoor and outdoor bar complex. The bar complex can hold 800 people and is open year-round. [5] Food that the bar serves is Czech specialties. [6] There is a linden tree that was planted by Václav Havel. [2] There are old signs and flags from the Czech Republic inside the bar.
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
The Q was originally co-owned by Sharp, an event producer and DJ; Bob Fluet, a co-founder of the Boxers NYC bar chain; and Alan Picus, a party promoter. [1] [2] [7] Sharp expressed intentions to open "a multi-floor LGBTQ nightclub ... that would redefine the genre" in early 2020, but the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic delayed these plans. [1]