Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Palomar is a Cuban bar and restaurant on Division Street in southeast Portland's Hosford-Abernethy neighborhood. Brooke Jackson-Glidden of Eater Portland said Palomar has "'60s-Havana vibes", with "palm-frond wallpaper, strawberry-daiquiri-pink chairs, and gold-flecked tables". [1] The drink menu includes daiquiris. [2]
Blue Plaque at former site of Pinoli's Restaurant, photographed in 2016. Pinoli's Italian Restaurant was an Italian restaurant owned by Carlo Pinoli at 17 Wardour Street in what was then the Little Italy area of London's Soho district, with another frontage on Rupert Street. [1] [2] It was founded in the 1890s. [3]
Originally named the El Patio Ballroom and located on the east side of Vermont Avenue between 2nd and 3rd Street, it boasted being “the largest and most famous dance hall on the West Coast.” The building featured a large mezzanine, a balcony, and a seventy-five hundred square foot patio. The dance floor could accommodate four thousand couples.
Rupert Street, with the entrance to Walker's Court visible to the North. Rupert Street is a street in London's Soho area, running parallel to Wardour Street and crossing Shaftesbury Avenue. Rupert Street is first mentioned in records in 1677, and named for Prince Rupert of the Rhine. [1] [2]
Updates on restaurants and food-related openings to watch for in 2024.
On August 22, 2006, the hotel became the Kimpton Hotel Palomar Washington DC. [8] The hotel was sold to the Massachusetts-based Service Properties Trust in 2019 for $141.5 million. That company owns a 1/3 stake in Sonesta Hotels, [9] and renamed the property the Royal Sonesta Washington DC Dupont Circle on December 1, 2020. [10]
Raymond Revuebar in 1980 Facade of the Raymond Revuebar from Rupert Street, 2015.. The Raymond Revuebar (1958–2004) was a theatre and strip club at 11 Walker's Court (now the location of The Box Soho nightclub), in the centre of London's Soho district.
The Gielgud Theatre is a West End theatre, located on Shaftesbury Avenue, at the corner of Rupert Street, in the City of Westminster, London. The house currently has 994 seats on three levels. The theatre was designed by W. G. R. Sprague and opened on 27 December 1906 as the Hicks Theatre, named after Seymour Hicks, for whom it was built.