144 E Wells St
Milwaukee, WI 53202
(414) 286-3663
Evolution Milwaukee is a unique place for people to gather for a night out. More than a standard restaurant or bar! You can hit the ping pong tables or watch the game. We also threw darts and a pool table into the mix, so there is something for everyone! During the day, we are a great place for the family and after 9pm, we are 21 and older. This 4,000 square foot table tennis and social club sports Olympic competition table tennis acommodations and top of the line furnishings in a trendy, unique setting. CHECK US OUT ON YOUTUBE AND THE WEB at www.evolutionmke.com
Escape Chambers MKE is like nothing you have ever seen before. Located on the second floor of Grand Avenue Mall in downtown Milwaukee, Escape Chambers MKE is the real‐life incarnation of movies like Saw, National Treasure, Sherlock Holmes, and The DaVinci Code. Puzzles, riddles, and coded messages are your only means of escape, as this is more a mental challenge than physical. Successfully navigating the different scenarios of the rooms, require more than just brains, alone…you must learn to communicate and work together with your team members, if you want any hope of walking out the doors to freedom. Group sizes vary, based on each different scenario, and all ages are welcome; although we do recommend participants be 10 and older, as some of our rooms contain more of a “fear factor.” Scenarios differ in difficulty and intensity, depending on the size of the group. While some of the puzzles appear quite simple in their inception, adrenaline and the stress from an unyielding countdown timer, inching ever‐closer to zero, makes seemingly ordinary tasks, mentally exhilarating! The creators will put your cognitive abilities to the ultimate test, while providing a level of entertainment rarely seen these days. And unlike other escape rooms, the seamless execution of combining mind-bending riddles, adrenaline‐spiking moments of suspense and surprise, and engaging story lines, provides participants with the type of realistic experience that you simply cannot find anywhere else.
Happy Hour 4pm to 7pm Monday through Friday Brunch on Sunday 11AM-2PM Free Parking after 5pm M-F & weekends with purchase & validation in parking structure above us!
Bastille Days 2016 (Details to come in 2016) 6 Hours: Thursday July 10- 11am-midnight Friday July 11- 11am-midnight Saturday July 12- 10am-midnight (Kid's Day Activities kick-off at 10am) Sunday July 13- 11am-9pm Bastille Days, Milwaukee’s popular French festival and one of the nation’s largest French-themed celebrations, returns to downtown Milwaukee’s Cathedral Square Park, July 10 – 13. The free, four-day bash attracts over 250,000 visitors annually who enjoy live music, an international marketplace, chef and wine demos, French and Cajun cuisine, roaming busker entertainment and a signature 43-foot Eiffel Tower replica offering hourly light shows. General Information Bastille Days is located in Downtown Milwaukee and centered around Cathedral Square Park, providing a unique setting that both residents and visitors of East Town, always find charming. The event is known for the impromptu street performers, roaming minstrels, a variety of interactive and musical entertainment. Bastille Days also boasts a wide variety of some of the best restaurant vendors in Milwaukee!
Milwaukee’s most historic tea room, perched atop the prestigious china and crystal store, serving homemade soups, salads, sandwiches, and desserts.
We are fiercely pro-Milwaukee. The best 30 year old, all music, community-powered, free form radio station in the entire galaxy. We are the Mighty Ninety-One, Frontier Radio WMSE Milwaukee. For thirty years WMSE has been Milwaukee's premier radio station for music that isn't played anywhere else on the radio dial. Since the station's beginnings we've focused strongly on supporting the local music community by spinning Milwaukee made music, hosting band performances live in our downtown studios, interviewing bands and adding them to the roster of our annual WMSE Backyard BBQ Music Festival (September 6, 2014). Our program schedule is made up of almost every genre possible. Indie rock, hip hop, metal, blues, country, rockabilly, reggae, prog, garage rock, punk, hardcore, world music, latin music, electronic, industrial, post-rock, post-punk (and all the other post-genres), new age, classical, jazz, experimental, avante garde, classic rock...you get the point. Listen to us at: http://www.wmse.org/ Follow us and find out what we're up to: Twitter: https://twitter.com/WMSE Instagram: http://instagram.com/wmsemke Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/wmse Vimeo: http://vimeo.com/wmse YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/wmseradio BlipTV: http://blip.tv/wmse
Join us in downtown Milwaukee on November 19th, 2016! The parade begins at 9:30 a.m. at the corner of Kilbourn Avenue and Astor Street. The parade continues west on Kilbourn to Old World 3rd Street where it turns left and continues south to Wisconsin Avenue. The parade officially ends in front of The Shops of Grand Avenue on the corner of Old World 3rd Street and Wisconsin Avenue. Find us on Twitter - @mkeparade
Online menus, items, descriptions and prices for Rumpus Room - Restaurant - Milwaukee, WI 53202
The Newsroom Pub houses a beautiful century-old bar as well as an extensive on-display collection of famous celebrity and politician autographs dating back to 1885. Popular for its hand crafted classic cocktails and craft beers, located in the theater district and just off the ever-popular Water Street.
Online menus, items, descriptions and prices for China Gourmet - Restaurant - Milwaukee, WI 53202
Oneida Street Station, also known as the East Wells Power Plant, was a power plant operated by The Milwaukee Electric Railway & Light Company. Constructed from 1898 to 1900, it was designed by architect Herman Esser in neoclassical revival style. The building is located in downtown Milwaukee, Wisconsin, at the Milwaukee River and Wells Street, which was once known as Oneida Street. The company began operating electric street cars in 1890. Their expanding network of streetcar and interurban railway lines were powered by several of their own power plants. As the company generated more power than they used, they sold the excess electricity, and, as Wisconsin Energy Corporation, eventually became the major supplier of power to eastern Wisconsin. The American Society of Mechanical Engineers describes the plant as the \"first central power station in the United States to be equipped and successfully operated with pulverized coal.\" From 1918 to 1920, the plant was the site of pioneering experiments into the use of pulverized coal-fired boilers.
Boutique, independent investment firm. Singular focus on value investing. Active manager with 4 U.S. funds, 1 int’l fund, and 4 SMA strategies.
The Safe House Restaurant opened in 1966 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Filled wall-to-wall with spy memorabilia collected by founder/owner David J. Baldwin, it has been used as a backdrop in movies shot in Milwaukee such as Major League, and has been featured on the History Channel as one of the best secret locations to visit in the United States. The restaurant has been in featured articles in Time, the Chicago Tribune, People Magazine, and the London Daily Express for its food, spy drinks and espionage-theme. Mascot: Yugyps. According to Rachael Ray in her $40 a Day series, \"you would have to be a CIA agent to figure this place out in one trip\". Per Wired Magazine, the Safe House is \"the Hippest Place on the Planet.\" Connects to The Newsroom Pub, also designed by David Baldwin, where autographs of celebrities who have spoken to the Milwaukee Press Club are displayed. The ornate banquet rooms have booths with secret entrances into the Safe House.
The Milwaukee City Hall is in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States. It was finished in 1895, at which time it was the third tallest structure in the United States. The city hall's bell tower, at 353 feet (108 m), made it the third tallest structure in the nation, behind the Washington Monument & Philadelphia City Hall. The Hall was Milwaukee's tallest building until completion of the First Wisconsin Center in 1973.DesignMilwaukee City Hall was designed by architect Henry C. Koch in the Flemish Renaissance Revival style, based on both German precedent (for example, the Hamburg Rathaus or city hall), and local examples (the Pabst Building, demolished in 1981). Due to Milwaukee's historic German immigrant population, many of the surrounding buildings mirror this design. The foundation consists of 2,584 white pine pilers which were driven in to the marshy land surrounding the Milwaukee River. The upper part of the tower was rebuilt after a fire in October 1929.The bell in City Hall was named after Solomon Juneau, Milwaukee's first mayor. It was designed and crafted by the Campbells, who were early pioneers in creating diving chambers and suits near the Great Lakes area during that time.
The Milwaukee Center is a 28-story, 426-foot-tall postmodern high-rise building in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The building was completed in 1988, during a small building boom in Milwaukee that also included 100 East Wisconsin. Until 100 East was completed, the Milwaukee Center was the second tallest building in Milwaukee. The peaked tower, red brick, and the use of green near the top pay homage to the style of the Milwaukee City Hall. The building is primarily used for offices, but has parking as well. The Milwaukee Center's construction was spurred by the Milwaukee Repertory Theater's purchase and subsequent selling of the land surrounding the former Wisconsin Electric Powerhouse which was converted into The Rep's primary performance venue, the Quadracci Powerhouse. The Milwaukee Center's rotunda connects the office tower with the Inter Continental Hotel Milwaukee and the historic Pabst Theater.