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The Sheraton-Landmark Hotel was designed in the then-popular brutalist style by architect Ross Lort and built by Vancouver businessman Ben Wosk, at a cost of $12 million, [1] by the oldest construction company on the West Coast, Smith Bros. & Wilson. Upon completion in 1973, it was the third tallest building in Vancouver at 120.1 m (394 ft) and ...
Elisa is a farm-to-table [6] steakhouse with a "contemporary" ambiance [7] in Vancouver's Yaletown neighborhood, specializing in seafood and steak. [8] The 6,800-square-foot [9] restaurant uses a Grillworks Infierno wood-fired grill, and the interior has hostess and wine decanting stations, ceiling millwork, veneer wall panels, and a wine cellar. [10]
Salmon n' Bannock [a] is a restaurant in the Fairview neighbourhood in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, situated on the Broadway thoroughfare. First opening in 2010, it expanded in 2022 to a second location in the Vancouver International Airport dubbed Salmon n' Bannock On The Fly.
In 1895, streetcar tracks were laid down the street, supporting a concentration of shops and restaurants. From the early to middle-late 20th century, and especially after significant immigration from postwar Germany, the northwest end of Robson Street was known as a centre of German culture and commerce in Vancouver, earning the nickname Robsonstrasse, even among non-Germans (this name lives ...
Vancouver is one of three regions Michelin reviews in Canada, alongside Toronto (which was also added in 2022) and Quebec (which will have its inaugural guide in 2025). [ 4 ] As of the 2024 guide, there are 10 restaurants in Vancouver with a Michelin-star rating, all receiving one star with no two or three star awards being issued.
List of restaurants in Vancouver; References This page was last edited on 14 December 2024, at 23:31 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution ...
Another general store, restaurant, drugstore, blacksmith and sheet-metal shop opened. For a year, the new station was the western terminus, until the C&K connected the benches on either side of the creek with a trestle. Bypassing the landing, the line advanced westward in 1891 to what would become Robson.
The Robson Valley and the head waters of the Fraser were considered to be the Northern hunting and fishing grounds of the Secwepemc, particularly the Texqa'kallt division. Anthropologist James Teit noted that a "[Shuswap] band, mixed with Cree, live practically east of the Rocky Mountains; in the neighbourhood of Jasper House, and west to Tête ...