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Flat Iron Building (Goshen, New York) 1906 or before built 25 Main St. Goshen, New York [50] [51] [52] 47 Plaza Street West: 1928 built 47–61 Plaza Street West (at Grand Army Plaza), Park Slope: Brooklyn, New York City
[a] [13] Another resident in the 1930s was the composer Eric Coates who lived in Flat 176 between 1930 and 1939. [b] [15] During World War II the Special Operations Executive (SOE) was based at 64 Baker Street, hence its nickname, the Baker Street Irregulars. [16] The SOE had a Norwegian Section which was located in three flats at Chiltern Court.
The NCBA started promoting flat iron steak in 2001 and in the early 2000s Applebee's put it on the menu, and the Kroger grocery store chain started carrying the cut in 2006. In 2012, sales of flat iron steak brought in approximately $80 million USD. [3] [5] The name flat iron steak comes from the cut's resemblance to an old-fashioned flat iron. [6]
Their windows are recessed sashes, in stuccoed reveals, under flat gauged arches. Reaching out below the first floor is a stucco plat band, painted stone or stucco cornice over the next, then a stucco cornice and blocking course marking the attic storey. Original, cast iron, geometric patterned balconies adorn the first floor.
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During 1790 the Yorkshire Stingo was the temporary home of the second cast iron bridge ever built. [2] (The first was The Iron Bridge.) This was designed by Thomas Paine, better known as the author of the revolutionary 1791 best-seller Rights of Man. Paine had endeavoured to interest the authorities in Philadelphia and Paris in his design.
Raw blade steak, showing the gristly fascia membrane down the middle. The steaks are cross-cut from the top blade subprimal, also known as Infraspinatus. [1] It is becoming more popular and profitable to abstain from cross cutting the top blade and instead produce flat iron steaks which is cut with the grain and eliminates the connective tissue that runs down the middle of this steak.
Flat Iron Building (Chicago) Flat Iron Building (Welch, West Virginia) Flatiron Building; Flatiron Building (Asheville, North Carolina) Flatiron Building (Atlanta) Flatiron Building (Bellingham, Washington) Flatiron Building (Brownsville, Pennsylvania) Flatiron Building (Fort Worth, Texas) Flatiron Building (Grand Forks, North Dakota)