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Bar signage c. 1970s. Ringside Café is situated on Pearl Alley in Downtown Columbus. The alley and neighboring Lynn Street contain numerous restaurants and historic buildings amid skyscraper office buildings, near the Rhodes State Office Tower, the tallest building in Columbus, and behind the Hayden Building on Capitol Square. [7]
Midway on High, also known as Midway Bar and Restaurant or simply Midway, is a bar located in Columbus, Ohio, adjacent to the main campus of Ohio State University.Directly across the street from the Ohio Union, the High Street bar has been open since 2012 and since its opening has been owned by local firm A&R Creative.
In 2021, the project was updated to a cost of $105 million, with 40 apartments and similar other uses, including four to five bars, restaurants, and coffee shops; the hotel was cut from the plan and replaced with a two-story restaurant and office space with a rooftop bar. The estimated completion date was moved from 2021 to summer 2023. [7]
Melt Bar and Grilled was a restaurant chain in Ohio that specialized in gourmet grilled cheese sandwiches and other comfort food favorites. [1] The restaurant was founded in 2006 in Lakewood, Ohio by Matt Fish, who owned and operated the restaurants as the chief executive officer. [2] Melt enjoyed notoriety both locally and nationally.
Max & Erma's is an American casual dining restaurant chain based in Columbus, Ohio. As of April 2024, the company operates seven locations in Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, and Pennsylvania, down from a peak of 110 restaurants across more than 12 states in the mid-2000s. [1] It was founded in 1972 by Todd Barnum and Barry Zacks.
[2] [3] The building's hotel, the Merchant Hotel, will have 162 guest rooms, the Trade Room and Bar, a courtyard, and restaurants. [4] The building will also include a private social club, the Merchant Club, for people interested in wellness, arts, culture, and the club's programming.
Worker who questioned Jamie Dimon’s RTO mandate says he was fired—then told he could keep his job—after testy town hall exchange
The station was decommissioned in 1968. From 1974 to 2002, the space was used for a restaurant and bar, also known as Engine House No. 5. In 2004, the building was converted for office use, and today is the Columbus branch of Big Red Rooster, a marketing company.