Ad
related to: countryside garden center michigan avenue pittsburgh
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Garden Theater (or Garden Theatre) is a 1,000-seat theater that was built in 1915 [1] at 12 West North Avenue in the Central Northside neighborhood of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA. Formerly a movie theater , it closed in 2007 [ 1 ] and has not been in use much since that time, except for a scene in the movie adaptation of One for the Money ...
327 Craft Avenue Oakland 2001 Pittsburgh Children's Museum (Allegheny [Old] Post Office) 1897 William Martin Aiken: 10 Children's Way Allegheny Center 1971 Pittsburgh Engineer's Building (Union Trust Company) 1898 D. H. Burnham & Company: 337 Fourth Avenue Downtown 1974 Pittsburgh Gifted Center (McKelvy School)
The $107 million, LEED CS Silver-certified tower [2] consists of 18 floors [3] and is located the Market Square and Point Park University sections of Downtown Pittsburgh. The tower includes a 197-room Hilton Garden Inn Hotel [4] and Market Square Garage, 321-car parking complex [5] managed by Alco Parking.
The company's headquarters remained in Detroit, Michigan. In 1974 Frank's acquired five garden centers from the Green Giant Company. By its 25th anniversary in 1971, Frank's had 51 locations in five states, employing approximately 1200 workers. Sales had reached approximately $37.2 million with a net profit of $1.13 million.
Mellon Park is a park in the Shadyside and Point Breeze neighborhoods of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, straddling both sides of Fifth Avenue, from approximately Shady Avenue to Penn Avenue, the western corner abutting Pittsburgh Center for the Arts building. The southern part of the park is home to the Walled Garden and the park holds events ...
The Outdoor Garden is located to the northwest of the main building complex. [42] The garden contains many smaller gardens and plant collections, including an herb garden, a medicinal garden, perennials, ferns and dwarf conifers. The original hardscape was constructed by Works Progress Administration in 1935 and persists to this day. [43]
On August 30, 2007, the Highland Park Residential Historic District was officially listed on the National Register of Historic Places. [2] The historic district encompasses the entire neighborhood of Highland Park: its western border consists of Chislett Street (from Stanton Avenue on the south to Hampton Street on the north) and Heth's Run (or more specifically, King Avenue and Cordova Street ...
The cultural district was the brainchild of H. J. Heinz II (1908–1987), known as Jack Heinz, and is managed by the Pittsburgh Cultural Trust.The Pittsburgh Cultural Trust was formed in 1984 to realize Jack's vision of an entire cultural district for blocks of the Penn–Liberty Avenue corridor, which then was a blighted area.