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The Lodge Room has an 18-foot (5.5 m) ceiling and rich cherry wood paneling, [4] original embossed cotton anaglypta, and paintings at both ends of the hall depicting Egyptian scenes, including a sphinx and pyramid. [3] There was originally a third-story arched balcony/arcade visually connecting the Lodge Room with the Banquet Hall.
The Octagon House, part of the Westland Historical Park Nankin Mills The Westland Shopping Center View from Ford Road in central Westland, MI. During the 18th century, the area was inhabited by the people of a Potawatomi Native American village. Other tribes, particularly three Algonquian tribes, used the area as hunting territory. Though white ...
The complex was self-sufficient. It had its own police and fire departments along with a railroad and trolley system. It included a bakery, amusement hall, laundry facility, post office and a power plant. It had its own farm, which included a dairy herd, dairy barns, piggery, root cellar, tobacco curing build ing and greenhouses.
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The City of Toronto government developed a management plan in 2014 for the park and gardens. The plan intends to preserve the park, protect the forest, bluffs and lakeshore, and maintain the heritage buildings (inn and cabin). [2] The inn was restored, part of a new facility for weddings, meetings and gatherings. One new wing is a banquet hall.
The garden is modelled after the formal gardens of French chateaux during the reign of Louis XIV, and is a popular setting for wedding ceremonies and photo shoots. The room opened in 1939 and was originally called the Cloister Garden. [36] In 1966, the room was redesigned as the present-day Broderie Room.
Blair House, also known as The President's Guest House, is an official residence in Washington, D.C., the capital of the United States.The President's Guest House has been called "the world's most exclusive hotel" because it is primarily used as a state guest house to host visiting dignitaries and other guests of the president. [3]
Roseland was founded initially in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1917 by Louis Brecker with financing by Frank Yuengling of the D. G. Yuengling & Son beer family.. In 1919, to escape Philadelphia's blue laws, [7] Brecker and Yuengling moved the venue to 1658 Broadway at 51st Street in Manhattan, [8] on the second floor of that five-story building, opening on December 31, 1919. [7]