Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Abbot Kinney Boulevard is a mile-long road lined with shops, restaurants, and galleries located in the southern part of Venice, Los Angeles, California. [1] It stretches from Washington Boulevard to Main Street. Abbot Kinney Boulevard is named after Abbot Kinney, a 19th century real estate developer and conservationist.
The Culver City Ships at Washington Boulevard and Overland Avenue, was the first to open (Dec 1956), and last to close, at 4pm on Thursday 31 August 1995, although it re-opened on Friday 20 October (under new management, Matthew 'Matt' Shipman, son of Emmett Shipman) and finally closed on November 25, 1996 (after the lease expired).
ESPN Zone in Baltimore in 2007. With Disney's purchase of Capital Cities/ABC in 1996, ESPN was a key part of the purchase, which Disney chair/CEO Michael Eisner then moved into additional brand extensions from biweekly sports magazine, ESPN-themed restaurants, video games to retail stores. [4]
The Hollow, a new forest-to-table concept restaurant serving a host of wild game items, has opened its doors at 823 Gervais St. in the Vista. It’s located in the spot that formerly was home to ...
Pacific Dining Car is a culturally significant luxury steakhouse business in Los Angeles California. It was founded in 1921 by Fred and Grace Cook in the backyard of a friend's house in Los Angeles. In 1990, it expanded to Santa Monica. [1]
With three games left in the regular season, the Broncos (9-5) can clinch a playoff spot in Week 16 if they win Thursday night’s AFC West tilt versus the Los Angeles Chargers (8-6).
Danziger Gallery opened a space in February in Santa Monica’s Bergamot Station; Pace in Los Angeles in April joined L.A.’s David Kordansky Gallery in the Mid-City area; Karma gallery will open ...
LA Weekly has described Nickel Diner as "an unlikely success", stepping from "what used to be considered the most notorious intersection in town". [1]The Los Angeles Times guide refers to the restaurant as a "trendy new diner" that is "located on a historic stretch of Main Street between Fifth and Sixth streets."