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Roman's Pizza is a South African-based pizza restaurant chain franchise founded in 1993. Originally named Little Caesar's (copied from the American brand Little Caesars pizza) when it was founded by Arthur Nicolakakis in Pretoria. The chain was rebranded in 2002 and renamed Roman's Pizza. [2]
The major roads that run through Sub-council 17 include Klipfontein Road, Kromboom Road, Racecourse Road, Jakes Gerwel Drive and Govan Mbeki Drive. Lansdowne is in ward 60 and the acting ward councillor is Mark Kleinschmidt, who is a member of the Democratic Alliance Party(DA).
St Peters Road, Durban Road, Klipfontein Road M19: East–west: R27 / M14 (Melkbosstrand) – N7 (Cape Farms) Melkbosstrand: Melkbosstrand Road M22: North–south: M10 (Valhalla Park) – Cape Town International Airport – N2 – M18 / M83 – M9 – R300 (no intersection) – M181 - M46 – M177 - M32 – R310 (Rocklands)
The suburb is surrounded by the suburbs of Lansdowne, Rondebosch East, Athlone, Belthorn Estate, Rylands, and Belgravia. The main roads through the area are (north to south) Jan Smuts Drive (M17) and (east to west) Turf Hall Road (M24) linking to the M5. Thornton Road was for many years the main thoroughfare for this suburb and a hotbed for ...
Fellside lies on land that once made up the farm called Klipfontein, one of many large farms that make what is Johannesburg and its suburbs. The suburb was proclaimed in 1904. The suburb was proclaimed in 1904.
Athlone is a suburb of Cape Town located to the east of the city centre on the Cape Flats, south of the N2 highway. Two of the suburb's main landmarks are Athlone Stadium and the decommissioned coal-burning Athlone Power Station. Athlone is mainly residential and is served by a railway station of the same name.
Kensington B is a suburb in Randburg, which is an area located in northern Johannesburg, Gauteng, South Africa.. Kensington B is part of ward 104 of the City of Johannesburg [2] represented by Counselor Mike Woods.
Whole round pizzas (pizza tonda) with a thin base. [5] Most sit-down restaurants serving pizza in Rome serve this style, and indeed this is probably the most commonly found style of pizza in restaurants in most regions of Italy. Sometimes referred to as pizza bassa ('low pizza') to distinguish from pizza alta ('high pizza' – the Neapolitan ...