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The general store in Hebron, NH is probably the town's most notable attraction. It's a very traditional store, and features everything from groceries to movie rentals. A slice of rural New Hampshire life frozen in time.
The interior of Roco's. Featured titles on the shelf and other older ones in crates and boxes. And Roco himself behind the counter.
A 8 x 16 Magazine and comic shop! It took me 2 days to complete because I had trouble achieving a detailed but clean look that I wanted. It's another addition to my growing Lego Town!
The Sykes Store circa 1920. That's Walter Sykes standing in front of the store. He ran the store from 1902-1920, then his son Bill took over.
Location of photo: Richfield Photographers
The Floor Store (43,113 square feet)
1257 Carmia Way, Chesterfield Marketplace, Richmond, VA
This store opened in summer 2022 and was originally located here; it was originally a Toys R Us, which opened in September 1998 (originally located here) and closed in June 2018. It operated as a Spirit Halloween in September-November 2018.
Some more extra bits and pieces from Laura. The blue and red urara boxes are also the last two items missing from my collection of urara gear, so it's great to get those.
So after nearly getting RSI from all this tagging, my haul has come to an end - and it's about time, cause I want to go and use this stuff! Thanks Laurabento, you have been so generous, and I can't express how appreciative I am of all your effort.
This store, about 10 minutes down the road from my house, hasn't been in operation for quite sometime. I remember when it was a busy place though.
After quite a bit of work we've finally released the first wave of shirt designs for the NEW PureVolume Store. It's a Grand Opening, baby!
Walk into Threadless Chicago and you'll have 2 choices. Up or down. Downstairs is where the shopping takes place. Upstairs you'll find a mezzanine area overlooking the first floor with all kinds of different things going on. Primarily, it's a gallery. The gallery will showcase all kinds of different artists but will consist mainly of work by winning Threadless designers.
There are 6 portable desks, each with 2 chairs and a computer that can be moved in and out of the space depending on the type of event. In addition to having gallery showings and openings, we'll be hosting various events like group critiques or flying a winning designer in to show how they created their design. Or maybe free milk & cookies on new tee shirt day every week :)
And I saved the best for last! We've teamed up with Digital Bootcamp to provide courses on all sorts of different creative subjects and programs right in the store. Anywhere from courses on ideas like web design or photography to specific programs like Photoshop or Illustrator.
There will be no shortage of things to learn, see and do upstairs in the Threadless store... we'll have a calendar of events put together by the grand opening on September 14th so stay tuned!
Check out the previous posts about the store:
- Announcing the Chicago Threadless Store Grand Opening and Grand Opening Party!!
penguin is one of the designer clothes brands that social store stock and deliver worldwide through our www.socialstore.com website
from the archives, another shot of this place. I'm sorry I didn't get to take my hassy to it before it was demolished.
GUM, Glavnyi Universalnyi Magazin; literally "main universal store") is the name of the main department store in many cities of the former Soviet Union, known as State Department Store during Soviet times. It is currently a shopping mall. Prior to the 1920s, the location was known as the Upper Trading Rows.
With the façade extending for 794 ft (242 m) along the eastern side of Red Square, the Upper Trading Rows were built between 1890 and 1893 by Alexander Pomerantsev (responsible for architecture) and Vladimir Shukhov (responsible for engineering). The trapezoidal building features an interesting combination of elements of Russian medieval architecture and a steel framework and glass roof, a similar style to the great 19th-century railway stations of London. William Craft Brumfield described the GUM building as "a tribute both to Shukhov's design and to the technical proficiency of Russian architecture toward the end of the 19th century".[1]
The glass-​roofed design made the building unique at the time of construction. The roof, the diameter of which is 46 ft (14 m), looks light, but it is a firm construction made of more than 50,000 metal pods (about 819 short tons, capable of supporting snowfall accumulation. Illumination is provided by huge arched skylights of iron and glass, each weighing some 820 short tons and containing in excess of 20,000 panes of glass. The facade is divided into several horizontal tiers, lined with red Finnish granite, Tarusa marble, and limestone. Each arcade is on three levels, linked by walkways of reinforced concrete.
Catherine II of Russia commissioned Giacomo Quarenghi, a Neoclassical architect from Italy, to design a huge trade center along the east side of Red Square. The existing structure was built to replace the previous trading rows that had been designed by Joseph Bove after the 1812 Fire of Moscow.[2]
By the time of the Russian Revolution of 1917, the building contained some 1,200 stores. After the Revolution, the GUM was nationalised. GUM's stores were used to further Bolshevik goals of rebuilding private enterprise along socialist lines and "democratizing consumption for workers and peasants nationwide". In the end, GUM's efforts to build communism through consumerism were unsuccessful.
GUM continued to be used as a department store until Joseph Stalin converted it into office space in 1928 for the committee in charge of his first Five Year Plan.[2] After the suicide of Stalin's wife Nadezhda in 1932, the GUM was used briefly to display her body.[4]
After reopening as a department store in 1953, the GUM became one of the few stores in the Soviet Union that did not have shortages of consumer goods, and the queues of shoppers were long, often extending entirely across Red Square.[5]
At the end of the Soviet era, GUM was partially, then fully privatized, and it has had a number of owners. As a private shopping mall, it was renamed in such a fashion that it could maintain its old abbreviation and thus still be called GUM. However, the first word Gosudarstvennyi ('state') has been replaced with Glavnyi ('main'), so that GUM is now an abbreviation for "Main Universal Store".Now many of the stores feature fashionable brand names familiar in the West; locals refer to these as the "exhibitions of prices", the joke being that no one could afford actually to buy any of the items displayed.
--Wikipedia
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Company name: Ameritel TMobile and ATT Cell Phone Store
Address: 1918 Kings Highway
Brooklyn, NY 11229, United States
Phone: 718-336-1155
Fax: 888-511-4704
Email: rob@wirelesschoiceny.com
Website: www.wirelesschoiceny.com
Hamersley St,
Broome,
Western Australia.
Bourne & Inglis Store
BACKGROUND In 1899, pearler Frank Biddles purchased Lots 213-215 along the route of the new tramway between the Streeter and Mangrove Point jetties. In 1903, a store was built on Lot 213 by Herbert Greenhill Bourne and Percy Inglis, operating as Bourne & Inglis, storekeepers and pearlers. The building, with a steel frame, is believed to have been prefabricated in Britain and shipped out. In 1912, the store was leased by Norman Harper, one of three brothers trading as Harper Brothers, pearlers. In 1920, pearler David Lennie Dyson took over the lease and traded from the premises as Dyson & Co until at least 1963. The place was known locally as the Conti Store because it was opposite the Continental Hotel. Rate records for 1931-1955 indicate that there was also a dwelling on the site (since demolished). From 1949 to 1969, it was owned by Audrey Pamela Villiers Langdon Clement Nielsen of Virginia, USA, who was a member of the Gregory family. In 1969, it was purchased by Pearls Pty Ltd, trading as Paspaley Pearls, a company formed to develop the cultured pearl industry in Broome. They used the building for storage of pearling equipment for a number of years.