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Pomodoro, which has served Tacoma’s Proctor District since 1997, will close at the end of July to make way for a new restaurant and wine bar helmed by local industry veterans.
The center of the Proctor District is located at the cross streets of Proctor Street and North 26th Street in Tacoma. The 1927 Proctor Street bridge just north of the district was rebuilt in 2006. A major commercial and residential development, Proctor Station, has been a controversial project due to its size and cost.
3819 N. 26th St., Tacoma, 253-752-1111, pomodoroproctor.com Monday-Thursday 3-8:30 p.m., Friday-Saturday 12-9 p.m., Sunday 12-8 p.m. Pomodoro will operate standard hours through July 30, its last ...
While much of the West End and some the Central District (such as the Stadium District) are identified with the informal boundaries of the North End, the City of Tacoma identifies these area as separate for purposes of representation and planning. The main commercial areas are along Sixth Ave and in the Proctor District and Old Town. The Sixth ...
THE GRILL 253. 9312 South Tacoma Way, 253-267-5316, thegrill253.com. 11 a.m.-11 p.m. (crowd dependent) - walk-ins welcome, call to reserve. One of the best new restaurants in town, go here if you ...
It runs for 5.7 miles (9.2 km) across the city, connecting Tacoma Community College to the North End and downtown. [1] 6th Avenue defines the directional north/south prefixes for streets. [2] State Route 16 and its predecessors followed 6th Avenue between the Tacoma Narrows Bridge and downtown until the construction of a freeway in the 1980s ...
In 2007, the Tacoma City Council adopted new official boundaries for downtown Tacoma which included a portion of the Hilltop neighborhood as far west as South L Street and changed the name of the Hilltop business district to the Upper Tacoma Business District, a name that local business owners had started using to avoid the gang and crime ...
It is also home to two buildings on the National Historic Registry: St. Peter's Church, the first church built in Tacoma and now Tacoma's oldest existing building, [3] and Slavonian Hall. The area is sometimes called Ruston Way, although the Ruston Way waterside walk spans far beyond the accepted bounds of Old Tacoma.