![]() ![]() ![]() Join the duel! Head to Keys on Main to watch dueling pianists perform. Suffice to say, it’ll be an interesting end to any night. Germain, lime, honey and lavender bitters). The menu - presented in a brown file folder - lists off creative cocktails, like the Loophole (rye, St. A special key (given with reservations) gets you in the door and into a room filled with exotic taxidermied deer and bison and antique leather chairs. Kick off the night here at Eccles Theatre, a 2,500-seat performing arts venue that hosts Broadway plays, comedians and concerts and boasts a spacious outdoor patio high above the city with views of Main Street.įollowing the show, walk a few blocks down Main Street to Keys On Main where you can sing along with dueling pianists, or taste a local beer at Beerhive where a strip of ice on the bar keeps your drink chilled.Įnd your evening at The Rest, a basement speakeasy hidden behind a bathroom door. Salt Lake’s historic Main Street is again the heart of the city’s business and entertainment districts thanks to a revitalization project that brought a shopping center, theater, restaurants and bars to the block. Cruise Main Street Get your culture fix at the 2,500-seat Eccles Theater. Here’s how to make the most of your nights out in Salt Lake City. and from live music and theater performances to nightclubs and cocktail bars, there’s something going on every night of the week. (Photos: Kylie Fly)ĭespite Salt Lake City’s reputation for bizarre liquor laws, it’s easy to get a drink here - and there’s plenty to do long after the sun sets. ![]() Wah Yee Associates of Farmington Hills, Mich., is the architect for the project.Catch a live performance at the State Room. of New York City has agreed to purchase the land and has hired the Sear-Brown Group of Deer Valley for planning and engineering services. Mike Milner and Hy Saunders of Landmark Plaza Associates II, a partnership based in Salt Lake City, own the land. The first phase involves a 170,400-square-foot structure to be built in a horseshoe shape, and the second segment would be 40,600 square feet in size. "This will be a totally new concept for Utah," he said. Unlike other factory outlets that sell off-price, outdated merchandise or seconds, the proposed factory outlet shopping plaza will be occupied by the companies that manufacture the name-brand clothing. "We've planned all along that the building would be the same architectural scheme to match the other buildings there," Lavender said. The planned outlet will be similar in appearance to the Landmark Inn, to ensure uniformity to the existing buildings in the area, he said. ![]() The developer predicts the outlet's annual gross sales would be about $40 million and the projected tax benefit to Summit County would be $415,000 a year. The two-phase operation could employ up to 300 people and generate an estimated $2.4 million in state and local sales tax. "I think it just added some positive feeling about the growth the area's going to experience. Though it was not a major consideration, Lavender said Utah's selection as America's choice for the 1998 Winter Olympics stirred additional interest in the area. "There's not that many areas that have a real good local consumer base and a strong tourist pull year-round," Lavender said. The developer, Charter Oak Partners, chose the Park City area because of its easy access to interstate traffic, consumer base and the site meets the manufacturers' requirement that the outlet be a certain distance from major enclosed malls that sell the same brands of merchandise. Lavender said a public hearing will be conducted later this spring to enable the developers to respond to residents' questions about the new development. The Summit County Planning Commission and the Summit County have not yet approved plans for the project. Developers would like to open the first phase of the plaza by the 1991 Christmas shopping season."We would like to begin site construction by late summer," said project manager Jim Lavender. Name-brand manufacturers such as Levi's, Bass shoes, Gloria Vanderbilt and Van Huesen have expressed interest in buying into the plaza. An Albuquerque, N.M., developer plans to build a 211,000-square-foot factory outlet mall in Park City on a 25-acre parcel between the Landmark Inn at Kimball Junction and the Powderwood Condominiums south of Interstate 80. ![]()
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