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Typical traffic and buildings along Whiteladies Road 51°27′58″N 2°36′40″W / 51.466°N 2.611°W / 51.466; -2.611 Whiteladies Road is a main road in Bristol , England It runs north from the Victoria Rooms to Durdham Down , and separates Clifton on the west side from Redland and Cotham on the east.
Brown Harris Stevens is an American real estate service company headquartered in New York City with offices across the East Coast serving Connecticut, New Jersey, the Hudson Valley, the Hamptons, Palm Beach, and Miami. The original firm was founded in 1873.
The Whiteladies Picture House (grid reference) is a cinema on Whiteladies Road in Clifton, Bristol, England. It was built in 1920–1921 by James Henry LaTrobe and Thomas Harry Weston (1870–1923) and opened by the Duchess of Beaufort on 29 November 1921. It formerly had a ballroom, billiard room and restaurant but in 1978, it became a three ...
It owns restaurants under various names, many of which are located in Central Ohio. While remaining independent and privately held, Cameron Mitchell Restaurants has grown to 50 restaurant locations across the country from Beverly Hills to New York City, and 20 different concepts in 15 states and the District of Columbia, including the ...
Guthrie Road, Clifton [61] Employment Exchange, Bristol (Labour Exchange) 1931 All Saints Street, Broadmead [62] Everyman Bristol (Whiteladies Picture House) 1920–21 Whiteladies Road, Clifton: 63] Old Fish Market, Bristol (now public house) 1873 45–57 Baldwin Street [64] Former Gardiners offices (part of Christopher Thomas Brothers' Soap Works)
The BBC campus, Broadcasting House Bristol, is located on Whiteladies Road, Bristol. The first building to be occupied was 21/23 Whiteladies Road, which was built in 1852 and is a Grade II listed building, [1] with four radio studios. It was formally opened by the Lord Mayor of Bristol on 18 September 1934. [2]
The Royal West of England Academy (RWA) is Bristol's oldest art gallery, located in Clifton, Bristol, near the junction of Queens Road and Whiteladies Road.Situated in a Grade II* listed building, it hosts five galleries and an exhibition programme that celebrates the best of historic and contemporary British art.
The Mauretania is a pub in the English city of Bristol, built in 1870 by Henry Masters, with a rear extension being added in 1938 by WH Watkins. It has been designated by English Heritage as a grade II listed building. [1]