Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
In 1999, Aroma Cafe had 23 locations, roughly 300 employees, and £10 million. [8] McDonald's acquired Aroma Cafe in 1999 for £10.5 million. [12] At the time of the acquisition, Apax Partners held 50% of the equity; [13] Zur-Szpiro, the founder, had roughly 10%; [14] and Finlay Scott, the Aroma chairman, held the rest. [13]
The Galleries (formerly The Mall Bristol, but originally opened in 1991 as The Galleries Shopping Centre) is a shopping mall situated in the Broadmead shopping centre in Bristol city centre, England. Functioning as one of the city's retail malls, it is a three-Storey building, which spans over Fairfax Street.
Bristol Archives is part of Bristol Museums, along with Bristol Museum & Art Gallery, M Shed, Georgian House, Red Lodge, Blaise Castle, and Kings Weston Roman Villa. [5] The core opening hours are Tuesday - Friday, 9:30am-4pm. In addition, on the first two Saturdays of the month, Bristol Archives is open 10am-4pm. [6]
Bristol is the second largest city in Southern England, after the capital London. Iron Age hillforts and Roman villas were built near the confluence of the rivers Frome and Avon. Bristol received a royal charter in 1155 and was historically divided between Gloucestershire and Somerset until 1373 when it became a county corporate. From the 13th ...
The first Aroma on Hillel Street in Jerusalem (2006). Aroma Espresso Bar in the Greater Toronto Area. Aroma Espresso Bar (Hebrew: ארומה אספרסו בר), or simply Aroma, is an Israeli coffeehouse chain with 162 locations around the country, [1] and several locations in the United States, [2] Canada, [3] Kazakhstan, and Ukraine.
Until 1898, Clifton St Andrew was a separate civil parish within the Municipal Borough of Bristol. [2] In 1891 the parish had a population of 29,345. [3] On 30 September 1896, the parish was abolished to form North Bristol. [4] Clifton as viewed from the Church, c.1840
A nineteenth-century view of 1–5, King Street by Samuel Loxton. King Street is a 17th-century street in the historic city centre of Bristol, England.. The street lies just south of the old town wall and was laid out in 1650 to develop the Town Marsh, the area then lying between the south or Marsh Wall and the Avon.
The park and ride site in 2008, with a Severn Beach train in the background. The railway through the site was inaugurated on 6 March 1865, when services began on the Bristol Port Railway and Pier (BPRP), a self-contained railway which ran along the north bank of the River Avon to a deep-water pier on the Severn Estuary at Avonmouth.