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Elaine's was a bar and restaurant in New York City that existed from 1963 to 2011. It was frequented by many celebrities, especially actors and authors. It was established, owned by and named after Elaine Kaufman, who was indelibly associated with the restaurant, which shut down shortly after Kaufman died.
Wimpy Grills – founded in Bloomington, Indiana, in 1934; eventually grew to 25 locations within the United States and 1,500 outside of the U.S.; its international locations were eventually sold to J. Lyons and Co. in the United Kingdom, which remains open while all of the American locations eventually closed by 1978 [14] [15] [16] [17]
Defunct restaurants in the San Francisco Bay Area (1 C, 12 P) Pages in category "Defunct companies based in the San Francisco Bay Area" The following 189 pages are in this category, out of 189 total.
Per foot traffic analytics platform Placer.ai, San Francisco has the lowest number of visits to offices of any major US city.In August 2023, office visits were down 52.7% compared to August 2019 ...
The closings were first re porte d by National Restaurant News, which said about one-third of all brand-name restaurant chains ended 2023 with fewer locations than they started with. Eating out in ...
After Tower's departure the restaurant was reopened briefly by new investors under the same name but with a less expensive, Mediterranean concept. [4] In 2004 it became the new location of San Francisco's Trader Vic's, which had been closed since 1994. The Palo Alto location of Stars became a branch of Wolfgang Puck's Spago Restaurant in 1997.
Starbucks is closing seven stores in San Francisco, California effective Oct. 22, the company announced this week. The San Francisco Business Times first reported the closures, citing a letter ...
The Akron (Los Angeles), a Southern California–based "eclectic" department store chain that had specialized in carrying imported goods and unusual items such as parking meters and live Mexican monkeys, and which had stores as far north as San Francisco and far south as San Diego before it was forced to close its stores in 1985 [18] [19] [20]