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A dish from Opal Rooftop, which will be one of over 50 restaurants participating in Greater Cincinnati Restaurant Week from Monday, April 15, to Sunday, April 21, 2024. Cincinnati foodies rejoice!
On 6 March 2005, the Lazarus name was dropped and stores now operate under the Macy's brand name. The 1990 film A Mom for Christmas, was shot at the store representing the fictional Millimans department store set out in the film. The landmark Shillito's department store building has been converted into the Lofts at Shillito Place luxury ...
Retail developer Jonathan Woodner first announced plans for Swifton Center in 1951, and sold his stake in the mall to Stahl Development in 1954. [2] The site chosen for the center was the southeast corner of Reading Road (U.S. Route 42) and Seymour Avenue within the city limits of Cincinnati, Ohio, a site determined by market analysts to be the center of population for the Cincinnati market at ...
Full menu service was also added to the Ice Cream Bridge, renamed the Bridge Restaurant. The final Pogue's branch store would open in 1976, a modest 112,000 square foot location in Florence Mall, the chain's only venture into Kentucky and the only one without a furniture department or restaurant. As ADG continued to attempt to update its Pogue ...
Taste of Cincinnati will host more than 25 local breweries and other beverage producers this year, including Fifty West, Braxton, Rhinegeist, Urban Artifact and others.
A view of the Frisch’s at 4645 Spring Grove Avenue on Wednesday, April 3, 2024.
Tri-County Mall, originally Tri-County Center, was a shopping mall located on State Route 747 (Princeton Pike) just south of Interstate 275 in the city of Springdale, Ohio, a suburb of Cincinnati, Ohio, United States. Originally known as Tri-County Shopping Center, it opened in 1960 and has been expanded several times in its history.
Peebles' grocery store closed in 1931 at the height of the Great Depression. [7] The Orpheum and Paramount theatres once stood at Peebles' Corner. Established in 1909, the Orpheum was the first playhouse built outside of the city center. [8] The Opheum provided vaudeville entertainment then showed silent films.