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City Bakery (Downtown) On Aug. 12, City Bakery closed its downtown store at 60 Biltmore Ave., which opened in 2004. The local, family-owned eatery, founded in 1999, still operates its original ...
Its new brewery is slated to open to the public early next year in downtown Asheville. On Nov. 18, Eurisko Beer Co., announced to close in July, will host its final day at its taproom at 255 Short ...
The WNC locations making the list were Sierra Nevada in Mills River at No. 1, New Belgium Brewing in Asheville at No. 2, Highland Brewing in Asheville at No. 4, Appalachian Mountain Brewing in ...
Notable buildings include the C. J. Harris Building (c. 1900-1908), New Jackson Hotel (c. 1920, 1926), Medford Furniture Company (1923), Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company (1925), the Sylvan Theatre (1927) designed by architect Douglas Ellington, Jackson County Bank's Sylva branch (1926), Cogdill Motors (1934), Moody Funeral Home (1946 ...
The Bethabara brewery operated longer than the Single Brother's Brewery in nearby Salem, NC In 1985, Uli Bennewitz pushed a change in the North Carolina law books. This change made it legal for a brewpub to exist under state laws. The next year (1986) Bennewitz opened NC's first brewpub, Weeping Radish Bavarian Restaurant.
Greening Up The Mountains Festival takes place on the fourth Saturday in April, a family-friendly downtown street festival that draws more than 10,000 people for arts, old time Appalachian crafts, local music, ethnic and locally inspired cuisine, tastings from multiple local craft breweries, and many child-friendly activities.
A list of new restaurants, bars, breweries and other food and beverage establishments to open in Asheville from January to March 2024. ... 192 Haywood St. downtown. Also, E’Terie, the hotel’s ...
Green Man Brewery was started in 1997 in the brew pub Jack of the Wood in downtown Asheville. [2] Initially brewed in dairy tanks at the brewery's inception, the operations were relocated to a new brewery and connected taproom nicknamed "Dirty Jack's" [2] in 2005, located in the South Slope area of Downtown Asheville, Buxton Avenue. [1]