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The first of three Eataly branches in New York City, seen in September 2010 Eataly in São Paulo, Brazil Eataly in Sherway Gardens, Toronto, Canada. In January 2007, Italian businessman Oscar Farinetti opened the first location of Eataly, [2] converting a closed vermouth factory in the Lingotto district of Turin.
Sherway Gardens (corporately known as CF Sherway Gardens) [3] is a large retail shopping mall in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The mall is located 17 kilometres (11 mi) west of Downtown Toronto , near the interchange of Highway 427 with the Queen Elizabeth Way and Gardiner Expressway .
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Prominent tenants (with floor space) include: McEwan Fine Foods (22,000 sq ft), [7] Anthropologie (7,000 sq ft), [8] and Eataly (9,800 sq ft). [9] The 10-metre (33 ft) clock tower in the square is an artwork by Douglas Coupland. The top of the tower sports a cluster of miniature houses, evocative of housing development in the Don Mills area. [10]
Begun in 2008, the Bloor-Yorkville Business Improvement Area and the City of Toronto updated the streetscape from Church Street to Avenue Road, creating an enhanced pedestrian experience with widened sidewalks, mature trees, flower gardens, modern lighting, and public art. [2] The project was completed in 2013.
The restaurant opened in February 2017, and is owned by Toronto restauranteur Jen Agg, who is known for her previous restaurant venture 'The Black Hoof'. [3] It serves contemporary cuisine , [ 4 ] offering a seasonal a la carte menu. [ 2 ]
Mario Francesco Batali (born September 19, 1960) is an American chef, writer, and former restaurateur.Batali co-owned restaurants in New York City; Las Vegas; Los Angeles; Newport Beach, California; Boston; Singapore; Westport, Connecticut; and New Haven, Connecticut, including Babbo in New York City, which received a Michelin star for several years.
By the mid 1950s, the location came to be L&B Spumoni Gardens, with the spumoni factory, a pizzeria and a luncheonette all on site. [8] In 2016, one of the co-owners, Louis Barbati, 61, was murdered outside his home in Dyker Heights. [9] In 2019, another co-owner, Patricia Barbati Coffey, 56, died after a seven-year battle with ALS. [10]