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The restaurant expanded into a second location in downtown San Diego on the corner of Broadway in 2011, [5] [6] named "Hodad's Too" and approximately twice the size as their other outlet. [7] Hodad's began selling its products in Petco Park after signing a partnership with the San Diego Padres . [ 5 ]
Little Italy is a neighborhood in downtown San Diego, California, [2] that was originally a predominantly Italian and Portuguese fishing neighborhood. It now consists of Italian restaurants, grocery stores, home design stores, art galleries and residential units.
A storefront in Seaport Village, with a downtown hotel in the background. Seaport Village is a waterfront shopping and dining complex adjacent to San Diego Bay in downtown San Diego, California. The complex houses more than 70 shops, galleries, and eateries on 90,000 square feet (8,000 m 2) of waterfront property.
Signatures Restaurant; Sisters Chicken & Biscuits – founded in 1979, this was Wendy's first attempt to expand beyond burgers [10] [11] [12] Sokolowski's University Inn, Cleveland, Ohio; Soul Daddy; Specialty Restaurant Group; Steak and Ale; Steve's Ice Cream; Sweet Tomatoes – Founded in San Diego in 1978
Fullerton's redevelopment agency moved the station next to the Santa Fe depot in 1980 to preserve it. [8] Now it is occupied by an Old Spaghetti Factory restaurant. [13] Pacific Electric constructed an interurban railway to Fullerton in 1917, terminating just north of the Santa Fe station and provided a transfer point to their system. [15]
Tokala said a lack of parking has cost her restaurant and the student-run restaurant at Niche. The restaurants used to bring in $10,000 a day, she said, and now bring in $1,000 a day.
Fullerton is also one of the few Southern California municipalities to be served by an independent newspaper, the Fullerton Observer. The Fullerton Observer Community Newspaper is an all-volunteer 40-year-old paper that is printed twice a month. It was founded in the late 1970s by Ralph Kennedy, a fair housing and civil rights activist who ...
San Diego Skyline in 2018. The city's tallest building, the pyramid-topped One America Plaza, is in center-right. San Diego, a major coastal city in Southern California, has over 200 high-rises mainly in the central business district of downtown San Diego. [1] In the city there are 42 buildings that stand taller than 300 feet (91 m).