Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Mimosas is open seven days a week from 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. and located at 7430 North Kings Highway.. A new seafood restaurant on the water. A meal with a nice view of Main Creek and the surrounding ...
With six locations throughout the Grand Strand, River City Cafe, 11 N Seaside Dr, Surfside Beach, SC 29575, is one of Myrtle Beach’s best known hamburger joints. Its walls are lined with donated ...
Broadway at the Beach is a shopping center and entertainment complex located in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. Broadway at the Beach is owned and operated by Burroughs & Chapin. The $250 million attraction is set on 350 acres (1.4 km 2) in the heart of Myrtle Beach and features three theaters, over 20 restaurants and over 100 specialty shops as ...
Meher Spiritual Center is a universal spiritual retreat and religious site located in North Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. [1] The Center adjacent to Briarcliffe Acres was co-founded by Elizabeth Chapin Patterson and Norina Matchabelli in the early 1940s under the direction of spiritual master Meher Baba.
On December 15, 1998, Silver Carolina Development and Barefoot Landing Inc. presented plans to the North Myrtle Beach city council for the $812 million 2345-acre Barefoot Landing Resort, which would be built over 12 to 15 years.
Places like Myrtle Beach are no exception, as more than 17 million visitors flock to the area. But while many look at summer at the beach as a carefree activity, there’s one issue that ...
Myrtle Beach Pavilion an amusement park that was located in the "heart" of Myrtle Beach (1948-closed Sept. 30, 2006). Planet Hollywood, a movie themed restaurant (with mostly 90s movies memorabilia) (opened in 1996 with stars Bruce Willis, Will Smith, and Jennifer Love Hewitt-closed Sept. 8, 2015).
The first boardwalk in what would later be called Myrtle Beach connected its first hotel, the Sea Side Inn, and the first of several pavilions. [11] Myrtle Beach had a wooden boardwalk in the 1930s. After being upgraded with concrete in 1940, with plans to expand it delayed by World War II, [12] it was destroyed by Hurricane Hazel in 1954.