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Gimme! Coffee is a coffee roaster and third-wave coffee shop, based in New York, US, with espresso bars in Ithaca and Trumansburg. In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, Gimme! in 2020 closed the Manhattan and Brooklyn-based locations, and began an Ithaca-area delivery service. [1] [2] Gimme!
900 Stewart Avenue is a building in Ithaca, New York, noted for its Egyptian Revival architecture, its dramatic placement partway down a cliff, and being the residence of astronomer Carl Sagan. The building is on a ledge about 50 feet (15 m) below street level, overlooking Fall Creek and Ithaca Falls .
In 2002, JCPenney closed and became Best Buy, Borders Books & Music, and Dick's Sporting Goods. At the time of the relocation of the Regal Cinemas from its original site adjacent to Cafe Square in 2007, the mall was renamed from Pyramid Mall Ithaca. [7] When Borders went out of business in 2011, the store became Ultimate Athletics. [8]
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WVBR-FM (93.5 FM) is a commercial student-owned and volunteer-run college radio station broadcasting to Ithaca, New York, United States and surrounding areas. The station operates at 3 kilowatts from a transmitter on Hungerford Hill in Ithaca. The home page of the station's website, wvbr.com, provides a link for listening to WVBR online.
The Ithaca HOUR was a local currency used in Ithaca, New York, though it is now no longer in circulation. [1] It was one of the longest-running local currency systems, and inspired other similar systems in Madison, Wisconsin; Santa Barbara, California; Corvallis, Oregon; [2] and a proposed system in the Lehigh Valley, Pennsylvania. [3]
Allan H. Treman State Marine Park is a 91-acre (0.37 km 2) state park and marina located in the City of Ithaca in Tompkins County, New York, United States.The park is located at the south end of Cayuga Lake, one of the 11 Finger Lakes of New York.
This is a list of people who either were born in Ithaca, New York or who lived there other than when attending Cornell University or Ithaca College. The county in which Ithaca resides, Tompkins County, New York, is ranked eighth in all 3,144 U.S. counties for the highest density of culturally notable baby boomers. [1] [2] [3]