An esports arcade is being proposed to take over a vacant spot at 5214 N. Sheridan Road within one of the Edison apartment building’s ground-floor storefronts.
Esports is a fast-growing industry centered around electronic gaming, usually played on a specialized computer. The games are streamed on the internet, allowing players to team up with others around the world. More recently, esports arcades or lounges have become popular destinations for such gamers.
In case you are keeping track:
This Dobbs Ferry Designer Just Opened a Charming, Innovative Storefront - Westchester Magazine
That very same understanding compelled Helmuth to apprentice with acclaimed interior design firm Thom Filicia Inc., after an impromptu move to New York City in her early 20s. “After my internship there, I opened Affordable Interior Design with a mission to bring that high-end look to people with low-end budgets,” says Helmuth of her company’s first Brooklyn location. “Nearly 3,000 clients later, our firm is growing faster than ever.
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With a popular website and a healthy roster of clients Helmuth could easily have operated without a physical storefront once she closed her Brooklyn location. “I have a lovely home office and could have easily worked there and saved a lot of rent money,” says Helmuth. “But I don’t think of it as rent, I think of it as marketing and also as an investment in our new hometown. When I moved to Dobbs Ferry with my family, I wanted to plant roots here.
Chophouse Barber Co.
Houston ISD's Chief Financial Officer Rene Barajas has accepted a position in San Antonio at Northside ISD, the fourth-largest school district in the state.
West University Place has officially rolled out updates to its new alarm monitoring service, beginning today.
The Texas Department of Transportation is advising weekend motorists to make plans for this major closure.
Five county judges in the Greater Houston area—for Harris, Montgomery, Fort Bend, Brazoria and Waller counties—converged Jan. 24 to talk about local mobility issues
Culture House turns vacant storefronts into pop-up communal spaces
As a college student studying abroad in Copenhagen a few years ago, Greiner noticed that the city had indoor public spaces of a type that didn’t really exist in the U.S. One coffee-shop-slash-bar, for example, aimed at students, sold drinks but didn’t require anyone to spend money to use the space. “Once I got back to the U.S.
In 2018, after a year of planning, CultureHouse opened its first pop-up for a month as a test to see if the concept would work. It was successful enough that Greiner decided to continue the work, partnering next with a property owner that owned storefront space at the bottom of a large office building in Kendall Square. It’s a neighborhood that’s active during the workday but had been dead at night and on weekends.
This may worth something:
Introducing Dalet StoreFront: A Frictionless and Secure Way for Media Organizations to Showcase
Underpinned by Dalet MAM orchestration engine for content preparation and delivery, Dalet StoreFront creates an optimal content shopping experience that maximizes inventory exposure, repurposing and retail opportunities, bringing value to the overall media operation and business. This service will benefit just about every Dalet customer from news networks sharing assets across affiliates to sports leagues servicing licensees.
“As audiences grow at a global scale, so does the need for more content. Maximizing exposure and facilitating discoverability of our customers’ new or untapped materials is more important than ever before,” states Luc Comeau, Market Director for MAM and Supply Chain at Dalet. “However, with this opportunity for increased content ROI comes additional supply chain complexities.
Was College Town Worth It? Storefront Owners, Developers Weigh In | WJCT NEWS
It's been seven years since Tallahassee's College Town broke ground. Since then, the area has become a weekend hangout and game day destination for students and alumni. But nearly a decade later, was the $100 million project worth it?
Early on in its development, there was speculation about the risk College Town posed. If it tanked some worried, it would bring down surrounding neighborhoods with it. After all, the nation was still in the throes of the Great Recession. As it grew, extensive renovations of Gaines Street followed, changing the landscape of the street as well as the adjacent All Saints neighborhood.
DiCarlo's Pizza closes in downtown York
On Wednesday, Jan. 29 a closed sign sat in the right storefront window along with a shut-off notice from Columbia Gas on the restaurant's main entrance.
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DiCarlo's is at 24 N. George St. in downtown York. The York location opened in 2013 under former owners Jodi and Ned Bauhof. The Bauhofs sold the restaurant in November 2018 to David DiCarlo, who reopened the space in December that same year .
The DiCarlo's Pizza franchise operates nine locations in Pennsylvania, Ohio, South Carolina and West Virginia. The York location is no longer listed on the company's website .
Tribeca Citizen | Action at the IPN storefronts from N. Moore to Duane
Stellar Management, which runs the Independence Plaza buildings, has told tenants that they will be erecting a fence four feet out from the buildings facade along Greenwich from N. Moore to Duane in order to renovate the storefronts. Thanks to P. and G. for the heads up and sending the letter, and Robert Ripps for the photos of the pole installation at the Duane frontage.
Stellar may call me back and provide a little more info? But it seemed unlikely from the one conversation I had…
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