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The Peachtree Arcade was a shopping arcade in downtown Atlanta, Georgia, United States. The building, modeled after the Arcade in Cleveland, was designed by Atlanta-based architect A. Ten Eyck Brown and was located between Peachtree Street and Broad Street near Five Points. Construction began in 1917 and was completed the following year.
The Vortex Bar and Grill is a restaurant in Atlanta, Georgia, with two locations, in Midtown on Peachtree Street, originally opened in 1992, and Little Five Points, opened in 1996 and distinguished by the large "Laughing Skull" entrance.
The concept was originally called ESPN Grill when announced in October 1997, with a slate of major city locations scheduled to start with Baltimore, Maryland, in mid-1998 and Chicago in spring 1999. [5] ESPN Grill was renamed on December 29, 1997, to ESPN Zone to connote that there was more to the venue. [6]
16-Bit Bar + Arcade. Cleveland Located in a Cleveland suburb, 16-Bit Bar + Arcade embraces all things nostalgic, not just video games. There's Mr. Spock, Madonna, and Hulk Hogan murals on the ...
Edgewood Avenue in the Old Fourth Ward and "Church" bar. Sister Louisa's Church of the Living Room and Ping Pong Emporium, or simply Church, is a bar on Edgewood Avenue in the Old Fourth Ward of Atlanta, Georgia, in the United States. [1] [2] [3] It is owned by Grant Henry. In 2014, a sister location opened in downtown Athens. [4]
The Earl was opened in 1999 by John Searson, a long-time Atlanta resident but a newcomer to the restaurant and live entertainment business. The building at 488 Flat Shoals Avenue was being used to store mattresses when Searson signed the lease with the intention of transforming the space into a club and lounge.
Carlotti’s bar and arcade concept may remind longtime Fayetteville residents of Dock’s at the Capitol, an $11 million project that renovated the vast and then-vacant Capitol department store ...
Later tenants included the "Gypsy Club" (c. 1951–1954), and "The Continental Room" (1954) before returning to the Anchorage name from about 1956 until 1963, when it was briefly known as the "Atlanta Playboy Club", an unofficial attempt to capitalize on the popularity of Hugh Hefner's magazine. A lawsuit closed the Atlanta Playboy Club.