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Owamni by the Sioux Chef, or simply Owamni, is a Native American restaurant in downtown Minneapolis, Minnesota, that overlooks the Mississippi River.Owamni's majority Native American staff serves a menu made from indigenous ingredients such as game meats, corn, and wild plants. [1]
Nankin Cafe was a Chinese restaurant in Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States. It was considered "a downtown Minneapolis landmark for 80 years". [1] Founded by Walter James in 1919 at 15 S. 7th Street, now the site of the Dayton-Radisson parking ramp, it was sold in 1949 to the Golden and Chalfen families. The restaurant moved across 7th Street ...
This article is missing information about type of restaurant, cuisine, notable history and chefs, additional achievements and awards (if any). Please expand the article to include this information. Further details may exist on the talk page. (September 2024)
Here's where you can grab a drink or a bite to eat on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day around the Twin Cities.
Hennepin Avenue is one of the oldest streets in the city and was the first road to cross the Mississippi River, in 1855, when the first Hennepin Avenue suspension bridge was completed. [1] In Downtown Minneapolis, Hennepin Avenue serves as a major entertainment thoroughfare, dubbed the Hennepin Theatre District. It also serves as the dividing ...
A new cocktail bar is coming to northeast Minneapolis from the team behind Stepchld, and it's right next door. Wild Chld is slated to open this spring in the former Hyde space at 24 University Av. NE.
The Nicollet Hotel, in downtown Minneapolis, was located on a slightly irregular block bounded by Hennepin Avenue, Washington Avenue, Nicollet Avenue and 3rd Street South adjacent to Gateway Park. The original hotel on the site (often called the Nicollet House Hotel ) was built in 1858.
Looking SW on Hennepin, toward 7th St. in 1973. After 1950, as the rest of downtown gentrified, especially as the part of the Gateway District east of Hennepin was demolished and replaced with modern structures and parking lots late in the decade, lower Hennepin Avenue and Washington Avenue South became known as a place for drunks, crime, and prostitution.