Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Pier Sixty-Six is a resort and marina located in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Situated on 32 acres, the Pier Sixty-Six property sits on the north and south sides of the 17th Street Causeway Bridge. [1] In 2016, Tavistock Development Company acquired the property and initiated a redevelopment project for Pier Sixty-Six. [2]
Cap's Place, originally named Club Unique, is a historic site in Lighthouse Point, Florida, United States. It opened in 1928 as a speakeasy (with associated rum-running), gambling den and restaurant. It is the oldest extant structure in the City of Lighthouse Point and the oldest commercial enterprise in the area. [2]
Dania Beach is a part of the Miami-Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood media market, which is the 12th-largest radio market [26] and the 17th largest television market [27] in the United States. Its primary daily newspapers are the South Florida-Sun Sentinel and The Miami Herald , and their Spanish-language counterparts El Sentinel and El Nuevo Herald .
Spinnaker, Hyatt Regency, Cambridge, Massachusetts (closed in 2004) Michigan. Summit, Renaissance Center, Detroit, Michigan (closed in 2017) Minnesota. Harbor 360, Radisson Hotel Duluth Harborview, Duluth [21] Missouri. Skies Restaurant & Lounge, Hyatt Regency Crown Center, Kansas City (closed December 1, 2011, when Sheraton Hotels took over ...
Dania Beach Hurricane was a wooden roller coaster next to the former flagship Boomers! amusement park in Dania Beach, Florida, United States. It was designed by the Stand Company and was built by Coaster Works. Built in 2000 at a cost of $4.5 million, it was Florida's third wooden roller coaster.
Shops and restaurants around the intersection of Commercial Boulevard and A1A in Lauderdale-by-the-Sea. Lauderdale-by-the-Sea is a town in Broward County, Florida, United States, situated 33 miles north of Miami. The town is part of the South Florida metropolitan area. As of the 2020 census, the population was 6,198.
Pirates World was a 100-acre (40 ha) pirate-themed amusement park in Dania, Florida, that opened April 8, 1967. [4] [5] Developed by Recreation Corporation of America, it was located on the north side of Sheridan Street between U.S. Route 1 and A1A.
In 1996, the town of Dania Beach and Broward County swapped land to allow the county to build an access road to a new station site and the International Game Fish Association Hall of Fame and Museum. [11] The new station, located about 1 ⁄ 2 mile (0.80 km) north of the Tigertail Road station site, opened on August 14, 2000. [12]