Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Le Pavillon is an 11,000 sq ft (1,000 m 2) restaurant. [1] It is located on the second floor of the One Vanderbilt skyscraper, and has its own dedicated entrance. [3] The restaurant faces Grand Central Terminal, which lies just across a pedestrian plaza, and the Chrysler Building, about a block to the east.
I visited Grand Brasserie, a new restaurant inside Grand Central Terminal in New York City. The restaurant holds up to 400 diners and occupies a massive 16,000-square-foot space.
The Campbell Bar The space as John Campbell's office, c. 1926. The Campbell is a bar and cocktail lounge in Grand Central Terminal in Midtown Manhattan, New York City.The space, long known as the Campbell Apartment, was once the office of American financier John W. Campbell, a member of the New York Central Railroad's board of directors.
Powers-Kennedy started excavating the line westward from Grand Central in May 1922. The Flushing Line extension was to run beneath the original line from Vanderbilt to Fifth Avenue, [21] running as little as 4 inches (100 mm) under the original line. [22] The tunnel also had to pass under a sewage line at Madison Avenue.
Currently, Pennsylvania’s happy hour is capped at four hours per day and 14 hours per week. With the new rules, happy hour can extend to 24 hours per week, with no restriction on the number of ...
Plug in your change and you’ll randomly receive one of 10 iconic illustrations of New York City, depicting the likes of Grand Central’s clock, an oyster from the Oyster Bar, a New York City ...
The restaurant space was first opened as the Grand Central Terminal Restaurant. Although Grand Central Terminal opened on February 2, 1913, its opening was celebrated one day prior, February 1, with a dinner at the restaurant, arranged for Warren and Wetmore along with 100 guests. [2] The restaurant was operated by The Union News Company.
The Grand Central–42nd Street station (also signed as 42nd Street–Grand Central) is a major station complex of the New York City Subway.Located in Midtown Manhattan at 42nd Street between Madison and Lexington Avenues, it serves trains on the IRT Lexington Avenue Line, the IRT Flushing Line and the 42nd Street Shuttle.