Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Cherry Street Tavern is a bar and restaurant at 22nd and Cherry Streets in the Logan Square neighborhood of Philadelphia. It is notable as a local landmark that has operated in the same location since the early 1900s. [1] The bar was bought by local high school football legend John "Tex" Flannery (1922-2007) in 1972. [2]
Goldie is a Philadelphia based chain restaurant serving vegan Israeli food.The restaurant was created and is currently owned by Michael Solomonov under the restaurant group CookNSolo, which also owns the Philadelphia-based restaurants K'far, Federal Donuts, Laser Wolf and Zahav. [1]
One Logan Square is an American high-rise building that is located in the Logan Square neighborhood of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The building stands at 400 ft (122 m) with thirty-one floors, and was completed in 1983. The architectural firm responsible for the building's design is Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates PC.
Previously South Philadelphia High School was the neighborhood's zoned high school. [4] [5] Panorama of Logan Square in May 2014 with Spring Garden (left), Cathedral Basilica, Logan Circle, and the Franklin Institute (center), and 30th Street Station, while not part of Logan Square, (right)
The Denver restaurant opened in the Oxford Hotel in 2017. [6] The Philadelphia restaurant is located in Logan Square. [citation needed] The Portland restaurant operates from the eighth floor of The Nines, a hotel in downtown Portland's Meier & Frank Building. In 2009, The Oregonian 's David Sarasohn gave the restaurant a 'B−' rating. [7]
My Loup is a French restaurant in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. [1] [2] [3] Established in May 2023, the business was included in The New York Times 's 2023 list of the 50 best restaurants in the United States. [4]
In 1989, the pair opened a brewpub in the Logan Square neighborhood of Center City, Philadelphia's central business district. [4] By 1996, the company was producing more than 25,000 barrels of beer and distributing to 24 states, making it the 26th largest microbrewery in the U.S.
Originally "Northwest Square" in William Penn's 1684 plan for the city, the square was renamed in 1825 after Philadelphia statesman James Logan. [2] The park is the focal point of the eponymous neighborhood. Logan Square was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1981. [3]