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Media related to Park Kampa at Wikimedia Commons 50°5′6″N 14°24′29.16″E / 50.08500°N 14.4081000°E / 50.08500; 14.4081000 This Czech Republic -related article is a stub .
The Michelin Guide reviews restaurants across the country, which is jointly funded with support from the Government of the Czech Republic. [1]As of the 2024 guide, there are 2 restaurants in the Czech Republic with a Michelin-star rating, a rating system used by the Michelin Guide to grade restaurants based on their quality.
In 1997, the restaurant was listed on the National Register of Historic Places. At the time, it was the only tiki restaurant in Ohio, and the only remaining supper club in Columbus. [3] It closed on August 26, 2000 due to prohibitively high maintenance costs and a significant loss of business, and so the property was sold to Walgreens.
University Heights is a city in Cuyahoga County, Ohio, United States. The population was 13,914 as of the 2020 Census . Located 8 miles (13 km) from downtown Cleveland , it is a suburb of the Cleveland metropolitan area .
Kampa is home to Museum Kampa, a modern art gallery showing central European (and in particular Czech) work. The pieces are from the private collection of Meda Mládek, wife of Jan V. Mládek. The museum, which opened in 2003, is housed in Sova's Mills on the eastern bank of the island. Magdalena Jetelova's huge chair sculpture, situated ...
With about 1.3 million residents within an area of 496 km2 (192 sq mi), it has the status of a statutory city. Prague is classified as a "Beta+" global city according to GaWC studies, [ 1 ] and is the fifth most visited European city after London , Paris , Istanbul and Rome .
Clifton Heights is home to the Hughes Center, a vocational and special-purpose high school. Its current Clifton Heights location was built in 1906. [4] University Heights is home to Hebrew Union College, a Jewish seminary. Fairview is the former home of Fairview German Language School, which was founded by the neighborhood's German community in ...
It was the largest shopping district out of Cleveland's downtown, [86] and with 90,000 residents in the area North Broadway was the second-largest Czech community in the United States (only Chicago was larger). [87] The Czech and other Slavic communities in the area had had a "profound effect on the development of Cleveland". [88]