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Stalactites is a Greek-Australian restaurant in Melbourne, Australia. [1] [2] [3] It is located on Lonsdale street in the Melbourne's CBD's Greek quarter. [4] [5] The restaurant was founded in 1978 by Konstantinos Tsoutouras, also known as Barba Kostas. [2] He had previously opened other chain restaurants and fish and chips stores, before ...
The same restaurant is called Olympic Taverna in Palm City and Spiros Kouzina in Melbourne.) Here in Vero Beach, Spiro’s is in the Indian River Plaza on U.S. 1, and has indoor and outdoor dining.
Skies Restaurant & Lounge, Hyatt Regency Crown Center, Kansas City (closed December 1, 2011, when Sheraton Hotels took over the Hyatt) Top of the Riverfront, Millennium Hotel , St. Louis (closed 2014)
It is home to Greek restaurants Stalactites and Tsindos, and Caras Greek Shop, a Greek cultural shop. Located on the corner of Lonsdale Street and Russell Street is the Greek Community Centre of Melbourne, [5] and at 209 Lonsdale Street is the Sam Papasavas Building - the home of the Australia-Greek Learning and Resource Centre of the Royal ...
Aug. 26—At the Greek Tavern now under construction, John Vachtsevanos hopes diners will enjoy not only traditional Greek food with a "modern twist" but views of nearby downtown Gainesville.
The Young and Jackson Hotel in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. This is a list of notable pubs in Australia. An Australian pub is an establishment performing many functions. These include serving alcoholic beverages, meals, functioning as a venue for various kinds of entertainment, and, sometimes, providing basic accommodation.
The interior of Bakalo Mykonos, the second location of the Greek restaurant and first in the U.S. Bakalo Mykonos. Where: 959 West Ave., Miami Beach. Hours: 5-10 Tuesday-Sunday.
Logos Bros Central Cafe, Blackall, Queensland. General dining room of the Logos Brother's Central Cafe at Blackall. Almost every town in Queensland, New South Wales, and country Victoria had a Greek café, and as many as ten operated in larger towns like Ipswich and Toowoomba during the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s—the heyday of the Greek café.