Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
FOOD was an artist-run restaurant in SoHo, Manhattan, New York. FOOD was founded by artists Carol Goodden, Tina Girouard and Gordon Matta-Clark. FOOD was considered one of the first important restaurants in SoHo. [1] Other individuals who were involved with FOOD included Suzanne Harris and Rachel Lew. [2]
Aquagrill was a seafood restaurant located at 210 Spring Street (on the corner of Sixth Avenue), in SoHo in Manhattan, in New York City. [1] It was opened in 1996 by owners Jennifer and Jeremy Marshall and closed in June, 2020, due to the economic effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Along with the restaurants Food, Cafe Rienzi, the O.G. Dining Room and the Spring Street Bar, Fanelli Cafe was among the gathering places for the artist community that settled in Manhattan's SoHo neighborhood from the Beat Generation era to the 1980s, between the neighborhood's times as a manufacturing center and an upscale shopping district.
SoHo can be reached by the New York City Subway, using the A, C, and E trains to Spring Street; 1 and 2 trains to Houston Street; the N, Q, R, and W trains to Prince Street; and the 4, 6, and <6> trains to Spring Street. The crosstown M21 on Houston Street and the north–south M1, M55 bus routes also serve the neighborhood. [81]
St. Alphonsus Ligouri Church (New York City) St. Anthony of Padua Church (Manhattan) Scholastic Building; Sean Kelly Gallery; Sixth Avenue; SOB's; Soho Grand Hotel; Soho Synagogue; SoHo Memory Project; South Village; Spring Street (Manhattan) Spring Street station (IND Eighth Avenue Line) Spring Street station (IRT Lexington Avenue Line)
The Moondance Diner in May 2007, only the edge of the revolving crescent moon is shown. The Moondance Diner was a diner in the SoHo neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City.. Frequently shown or alluded to in film and television productions, it operated from 1933 to 2012 at 88 Sixth Avenue, between Grand Street and Canal Stre
In 1931, John Perona (born Enrione Giovanni Perona in Chiaverano in the Province of Turin, Italy), [1] an Italian immigrant, with Martín de Alzaga [2] [3] opened El Morocco as a speakeasy at 154 East 54th Street, on the south side of 54th Street in the middle of the block between Lexington Avenue and Third Avenue, where the Citigroup Center now stands.
155 Mercer Street is a former firemen's hall, now commercial building, located on Mercer Street, in the SoHo neighborhood of New York City. Built in 1855, the building featured an ornate façade designed by Field & Correja which was largely removed over a series of changes between 1893 and the mid-1970s. The last fire company left the building ...