View allAll Photos Tagged PHARMACY

Royal Fredrik’s Pharmacy, 1758.

A pharmacy sign with green lighting.

The Abc compounding pharmacy provides you quality medicine at affordable prices with effective result.

Lucerne, Switzerland.

 

Building circa 1530. A pharmacy since 1833.

Sometimes you'll see the strangest characters in the Pharmacy.

Gloucester Pharmacy (5,600 square feet)

7453 Hargett Boulevard, Walter Reed Plaza, Gloucester, VA

Opened September 1st, 1998; pictured portion originally No. 1 (January 1998-October 30th, 2008)

London, Dec 2000

CVS Pharmacy #1530 (10,022 square feet)

2738 W Broad Street, Richmond, VA

 

This location opened in 1994; it was originally a Peoples Drug, which was built in 1992 to replace an older location on site.

The pharmacy is located in the back left corner of the store, and includes a fairly large seating area tucked right in the corner. I'm rather surprised this store has a pharmacy, given its age, especially since QFCs often don't have pharmacies (much more commonly than Safeways, at least).

 

That's it for this week. I should finish up this store next week, but this new quarter is looking to be quite a bit busier than last, so I'll just have to see what ends up happening over the next few months :)

CVS Pharmacy, Avon, CT. 7/2014. Pics by Mike Mozart of TheToyChannel and JeepersMedia on YouTube.

CVS Pharmacy #4063 (11,000 square feet)

1109 Benns Church Boulevard, Smithfield, VA

 

This location opened in fall 2007; it was originally a Rite Aid, which opened on September 11th, 1998 and relocated here in fall 2007.

CVS Pharmacy. 7/2014 By Mike Mozart of TheToyChannel and JeepersMedia on YouTube.

CVS Pharmacy, Branford, CT 8/2014, by Mike Mozart of TheToyChannel and JeepersMedia on YouTube

CVS Pharmacy, Waterbury, CT 8/2014 by Mike Mozart of TheToyChannel and JeepersMedia on YouTube.

CVS Pharmacy, Waterbury, CT 8/2014 by Mike Mozart of TheToyChannel and JeepersMedia on YouTube.

CVS Pharmacy #1991 (13,696 square feet)

11120 Patterson Avenue, Richmond, VA

 

This location was built and opened in 2010; it was originally located here.

SET 3 – Colony Crossing Kroger, Pre-Remodel

 

Speaking of the pharmacy wall, here’s a straight-on look at it, as viewed from out within one of the handful of short-height HABA aisles. My camera lens is angled down a bit more than normal here, which I feel is common for me when I take pictures of this area of a store, since I don’t want the pharmacists to see me, lol! Granted, that consensus is also true of all other store employees, in my book… but I guess in the pharmacy it’s a bit harder than everywhere else due to the setup of the space, greater employee presence, and lesser customer presence.

 

(c) 2024 Retail Retell

These places are public so these photos are too, but just as I tell where they came from, I'd appreciate if you'd say who :)

 

On the main street in Beauly.

CVS Pharmacy, Waterbury, CT 8/2014 by Mike Mozart of TheToyChannel and JeepersMedia on YouTube.

A modular pharmacy.

 

Some first timers for me. First time to design a model with Studio and not LDD. Moreover first time to build a modular with 4 instead of 3 floors.

 

The lowest level features a pharmacy where minifigs can get everything for their well-being.

 

One level above a shrink has his office. Apparently the guy from the casino who lost a lots of hard earned studs is here to do something against his gambling addiction. As soon as he lays down he can no longer hold himself back. The shrink however only looks at the clock above him to ensure maximum profit.

 

The shrinks profit goes into the two upper level where he turned the old apartment into a fancy looking one including an island kitchen and a jacuzzi.

 

Statistics:

Parts: 6127

Design time: About 100h

Build time: About 10h

 

Building instructions are available! Please check: www.ebay.de/sch/paul_faul/m.html?_nkw=&_armrs=1&_...

CVS Pharmacy, Waterbury, CT 8/2014 by Mike Mozart of TheToyChannel and JeepersMedia on YouTube.

Quigley's Pharmacy building, 2036 G Street NW, Washington, DC. From a George Washington University website:

 

GW alumnus Richard Lucien Quigley opened the pharmacy in 1891, one year after he earned his a degree in pharmacy science. The surrounding area was mostly residential. Twenty-one years after Quigley opened the pharmacy, GW’s College of Arts and Sciences rented a residence located just across the street, at 2023 G St., where Lisner, Bell, and Stuart Halls stand today. Before the purchase, GW owned two buildings on 15th and H Streets.

 

Until 1938, Lucien filled prescriptions and sold medicines, and later sold Cokes and burgers at the lunch bar. More importantly, he was a friend to the students. According to Hatchet articles, Lucien said students would turn to him when they needed to borrow money for dates. He said he was proud to say he never lost a cent. Al Kohrn took over the management of the pharmacy in the 1950s. He also served soda and ice cream to students.

 

"The soda fountain was located along the west wall, parallel to 21st Street and a few soda fountain tables and wire chairs were arranged on the open floor near the soda fountain counter," said Dorn McGrath, chairman of the Department of Geography. By the 70s, Quigley’s featured a lunch counter, candy counter and pinball machines. History in the making was not uncommon at GW, and Quigley’s was the place to observe it. In a 1970 special issue of GW Magazine, Kohrn spoke about Quigley’s role during the Watergate scandal. "We never had any problems with vandalism," Kohrn said in an article. "In fact, when we had trouble down at Watergate, and the police pushed the people back on campus … we stayed open while they were being tear-gassed and got as many kids in here as we could."

 

Famous people also enjoyed Quigley’s charm. In the mid-40s, students could find then GW student Margaret Truman waiting outside to meet her father for a soda. Jane Lingo, a 1946 GW alumnae who later served as assistant director of University Relations, said she remembers the days when Quigley’s Pharmacy was still around: "Quigley’s was the local drugstore, and it had a soda fountain on the right," Lingo said. "My friend, Margaret Truman, went there regularly for hamburgers, but I used to go to Leo’s, what’s now the GW Delicatessen." Sen. Hilary Clinton (D-N.Y.) mentioned Quigley’s in her 1994 GW Commencement address. She recalled the summer of 1968, when she interned in D.C. and occasionally stopped in the historic pharmacy. First Daughter Jenna Bush lunched with a friend at Tonic in February 2008.

 

Quigley’s faced some fierce competition in 1949 when a new GW student union opened at 2125 G St. The first floor cafeteria served breakfast, lunch and dinner. The second floor, the social lounge, housed radios and comfortable chairs and sofas. The fourth floor served as a recreation room with both a radio and record player. Quigley’s lost business as people found cheaper food elsewhere on campus. It was not in a central location any more, with new buildings popping up everywhere.

 

The University bought the building in 1974, and the site became home to the Department of Geography in the following years. It housed the University’s weather station, a part of the NBC Channel 4 news service, and often appeared on TV during Channel 4 Meteorologist Bob Ryan’s weather report.

 

The Geography Department moved into the new Elliot School of International Affairs on 19th and E streets in 2002. The building's most recent occupant is Tonic Restaurant, which brings the building back to its roots as a neighborhood and student gathering spot.

Rite Aid Pharmacy, Bloomfield CT. 7/2014 Pics by Mike Mozart of TheToyChannel and JeepersMedia on YouTube

Old Pharmacy :)

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