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Defunct restaurants in Brooklyn (14 P) E. Defunct European restaurants in New York City (3 C, 1 P) M. Defunct restaurants in Manhattan (3 C, 78 P)
The mall is served directly by the B13, B83, B84 and Q8 buses. Formerly terminating at Erskine Street near the Brooklyn Developmental Center, the B13, B83, and Q8 were extended to a new bus terminal area at the west end of Gateway Center North in August 2014. The B84, meanwhile, was created in June 2013 to serve the Spring Creek neighborhood.
The Mall at Bay Plaza: The Bronx, New York: New York City 780,000 square feet (72,000 m 2) [25] 80 Macy's, JCPenney 2014 (August 14, 2014) Prestige Bay Plaza Development Corporation 31 Hudson Valley Mall: Kingston, New York: Hudson Valley 765,704 square feet (71,136.2 m 2) 30 Target, Dick's Sporting Goods 1981 Hull Property Group 32 Wilton Mall
The New York Times included Sailor in a 2023 list of the city's twelve best new restaurants. [5] Time Out New York rated the restaurant four out of five stars. [6]Pete Wells placed Sailor twenty-fifth in his 2024 ranking of New York City's best restaurants.
Kings Plaza (officially the Kings Plaza Shopping Center) is a shopping center within the Mill Basin section of Brooklyn in New York City, New York, United States.Opened in September 1970, [1] [3] [4] it is located at the southeast corner of Flatbush Avenue and Avenue U, just north of Floyd Bennett Field.
In the 1968 film Bye Bye Braverman, a scene was shot with actor George Segal in front of Big Daddy's as well as on location throughout the borough of Brooklyn. During the mid-1970s Miami club fighter Jerry Powers whose claim to fame was 44 fights in one year worked at Big Daddy's Restaurant on Lincoln Road in Miami Beach. [citation needed]
Here are the greatest food-related “Saturday Night Live” sketches of all time, from Activia to Schweddy Balls, Crystal Gravy, Almost Pizza and so much more.
Empire Stores is a former warehouse complex along the waterfront Brooklyn Bridge Park within the neighborhood of Dumbo, Brooklyn, New York City, in the U.S. state of New York. It hosts a food hall and market operated by Time Out New York, [1] which opened in 2019, [2] as well as an art gallery called Gallery 55. [3]