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The Church Street Marketplace, looking north from Main Street in 2013. The Church Street Marketplace is an uncovered outdoor pedestrian shopping and dining mall in Burlington, Vermont, consisting of the four blocks of Church Street between Main and Pearl Streets. The mall was initially conceived in 1958 and was built in 1980-81 to a design by ...
Raintree Fine Jewelry is headed south, leaving Church Street for Huntersville, North Carolina, this summer. Contact Dan D’Ambrosio at 660-1841 or ddambrosi@gannett.com. Follow him on X ...
The three buildings on the east side are formally oriented to Church Street, but present proper facades to the park. The southernmost building is Burlington City Hall, a large neo-Classical and Georgian Revival building constructed in 1928 to a design by W.M. Kendall of McKim, Mead, and White. The park is bounded on the other three sides by ...
Burlington City Arts (formerly The Firehouse Gallery, or The Center, or the Firehouse Center for the Visual Arts) is an art gallery, art education/studio centre and cultural events space in Burlington, Vermont. The building was originally built as the Ethan Allen Firehouse on Church Street in 1889. The building is owned by the City of Burlington.
The Red Square bar on the Church Street Marketplace in Burlington, seen on Sunday, July 12, 2020. A string of recent violent crimes The shooting came in the midst of a series of violent crimes ...
The Burlington Montgomery Ward Building is a historic former department store building located at 52-54 Church Street, between Cherry and Bank Streets, in the Church Street Marketplace of downtown Burlington, Vermont.
Church Street Marketplace in autumn. In 2017, Burlington had $591.7 million in retail sales. [52] The Church Street Marketplace, a four-block pedestrian mall in the heart of the city, is the site of festivals throughout the year.
The former Masonic Temple at 1-5 Church Street at Pearl Street in Burlington, Vermont was built in 1897-98 to be the state headquarters of the Grand Lodge of Vermont, Free and Accepted Masons. It was designed by John McArthur Harris of the noted Philadelphia firm of Wilson Bros. & Company in the Richardson Romanesque style.