Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
He and Peters contacted Big Boy founder Bob Wian, reaching a 25-year agreement to operate Big Boy Restaurants in the Pittsburgh area, which would be called Eat'n Park. [10] Eat'n Park launched on June 5, 1949, when Hatch and Peters opened a 13-stall drive-in restaurant on Saw Mill Run Boulevard in the Overbrook neighborhood of Pittsburgh.
In 2001, Gourmet Magazine ranked the hot dogs fourth-best in America, [5] and The New York Times named it to a list of one of the "high spots in a nation of hot-dog heavens" in 2002. [6] The O was also featured on Rick Sebak 's nationally distributed PBS program A Hot Dog Program [ 7 ] as well as on an episode of the Food Network 's Unwrapped .
Best known for its craft beer and signature Pizookie dessert, BJ's offers a selection of $13 lunch specials from Monday through Friday between 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. Customers can choose from comfort ...
The Cultural District is a fourteen-square-block area in Downtown Pittsburgh bordered by the Allegheny River on the north, Tenth Street on the east, Stanwix Street on the west, and Liberty Avenue on the south. The Cultural District features six theaters offering some 1,500 shows annually, as well as art galleries, restaurants, and retail shops.
Station Square occupies the buildings and land formerly occupied by the historic Pittsburgh & Lake Erie Railroad Complex, including the Pittsburgh & Lake Erie Railroad Station, which are separately listed on the National Register of Historic Places. [2] It features restaurants and entertainment venues, including Highmark Stadium and the 396 ...
Market Square is a public space located in Downtown Pittsburgh at the intersection of Forbes Avenue (originally named Diamond Way in colonial times) and Market Street. The square was home to the first courthouse, first jail (both in 1795) and the first newspaper (1786) west of the Atlantic Plain, the Pittsburgh Gazette.
Mellon Square is an urban park in Downtown Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States.It is the first Modernist park built above a parking garage. With its distinctive black, white, and green geometric pavement, it is a prominent urban oasis and gathering spot in Downtown Pittsburgh.
Picklesburgh is an annual pickle-themed festival in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States.It has taken place in Downtown Pittsburgh every summer since 2015 (excluding 2020), [1] originally on the Three Sisters bridges and along the Allegheny Riverfront, before relocating to the Boulevard of the Allies and PPG Place for its 2023 installment.