Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Armet Davis Newlove Architects, formerly Armét & Davis, is a Californian architectural firm known for working in the Googie architecture style that marks many distinctive coffee shops and eateries in Southern California.
Restaurants by type (45 C, 115 P) Pages in category "Restaurant design" The following 11 pages are in this category, out of 11 total.
[7] [8] The architectural design was unusual for the time, especially for such noted architects to design a bar. [3] The new bar was named the Chamber of Commerce Cafe and Rathskeller, carved in stone above the doorway. [5] By May 1910, the Chamber of Commerce (the former Board of Trade) objected to its name associated with the bar.
Restaurant & Bar Design Awards organises a year-round programme of events based in the UK and most recently Internationally with an aim to build a network between entrants, judges, partners and sponsors. In 2014 Taschen [13] publications published a book, Restaurant & Bar Design dedicated to the ongoing work of the Awards.
The Kahiki restaurant was built from July 1960 to early 1961. It opened its doors in February 1961. [3] In 1975, designer Coburn Morgan drew up plans for an expansion to the restaurant, including a treehouse dining space and museum. Around this time, plans were also drawn for a smaller tiki restaurant that could be replicated for a Kahiki ...
Stanley Clark Meston (7 January 1910 — 30 December 1992) was an American architect most famous for designing the original golden arches of McDonald's restaurants. [1] [2] In an article about the origin of McDonald's golden arches, architectural historian Alan Hess wrote: "Nationwide success and proliferation have obscured the origins and creators of [the arches] in Southern California.
The third McDonald's restaurant to open, located in Downey, California, is the oldest operating McDonald's. It was the second restaurant to feature the Golden Arches design. Along with their practical knowledge, the brothers brought Meston a rough sketch of two half-circle arches drawn by Richard.
Helen Liu Fong (January 14, 1927–April 17, 2005) was an American architect and interior designer from Los Angeles, California. Fong was an important figure in the Googie architecture movement, designing futuristic buildings like Norms Restaurant, the Holiday Bowl, Denny's, Bob's Big Boy, and Pann's Coffee Shop that helped usher in an era of boomerang angles, dynamic forms and neon lights.