900 W Wisconsin Ave
Milwaukee, WI 53233
(414) 271-7510
We are Milwaukee's premier downtown entertainment destination! We offer Dueling Piano players from around the country that put on a completely request show for our guests. Lucille's is the perfect destination for any Bachelorette party, special occasion, or anyone just looking to have a great time! We also serve a full dinner menu including Grass Fed Burgers, Pasta, and all of your favorite bar food classics! Thurs 5pm-11pm / Fri & Sat 5pm-12am Every Wednesday Lucille's welcomes Christopher's Project to the stage. Doors open at 6pm and show starts at 8pm. There is no cover charge on Wednesdays. It's a great destination for a mid-week date night. Enjoy the candle light tables and some great entertainment! Lucille's is also home of Milwaukee's Largest Downtown game room including pool, air hockey, pinball machines, and more!
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
UW–Milwaukee Panther Arena is an indoor arena located in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The arena, which seats as many as 12,700 people and offers 41,000 feet of floor space, is part of a larger downtown campus, that includes the Milwaukee Theatre and Wisconsin Center.The arena was part of the MECCA Complex from 1974 until the 1995 opening of the Midwest Express Center.HistoryIt opened in 1950 and was one of the first to accommodate the needs of broadcast television. It was folded into MECCA (The Milwaukee Exposition, Convention Center and Arena) when the complex opened in 1974. It is also known for its former unique basketball court painted by Robert Indiana in 1978, with large rainbow 'M's taking up both half-courts representing Milwaukee.Since the 1960s, the Arena has held a number of concerts by high-profile performers. On September 4, 1964, The Beatles played their only Milwaukee concert, at the Arena, to a sold-out crowd of screaming fans. Folk-rock icon Bob Dylan played a two-night stand there in mid-October as part of his Fall 1981 tour.It was home to the Milwaukee Hawks (1951–55) and the Milwaukee Bucks of the NBA (1968 to 1988), and hosted the 1977 NBA All-Star Game before an audience of 10,938. The venue was also home to Marquette University's men's basketball team along with the International Hockey League Milwaukee Admirals. These teams all moved to the BMO Harris Bradley Center upon the newer arena's opening in 1988.
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.
WEEKLY EVENTS/SPECIALS: Happy Hour: Monday-Saturday, 4-8PM $2 Micro Taps, $3 Premium Taps, $3 Rail Doubles Sunday: Half Off All Drinks Monday: $3 Micro Bottles, $2 SoCo Limes Tuesday: $2 Wisco Taps, $2 Apple Pie Shots Wednesday: Ladies' Night! $3 Big Ass Beers, $3 Bomb Shots (RedBull) Thursday: College Night Beer Pong Leagues $4 Tall 3 Olives Mixers, $4 Light Pitchers, $2 McGuillicuddy Shots Party Rock with DJ Matthew Future Friday: $4 Long Islands, $4 Labatt Blue/ Labatt Blue Light Silo Cans, $3 Bacardi Bombs DJ FirstGrade rockin' the dance floor. Saturday: $2 Pabst Taps, $2 Schlitz Taps, $3 Tall Rail Mixers DJ Sunshine keepin the party goin'
Pre-1964 traditional hot rod and custom car show to help raise awareness of the Historic Pabst Brewery Complex. This show is July 8th and 9th 2016 located at Best Place @ the Historic Pabst Brewery 901 West Juneau Milwaukee, WI 53233
The Central Library is the headquarters for the Milwaukee Public Library System as well as for the Milwaukee County Federated Library System. Designated a Milwaukee Landmark in 1969, the building remains one of Milwaukee's most monumental public structures.Today, the Central Library occupies almost the entire building with 3 exceptions: the headquarters for the Milwaukee County Federated Library System; the Wisconsin Talking Book and Braille Library; and Volunteer Services for the Visually Handicapped.Central Library architectureA national competition was held to pick a design for a building to house both the public library and the public museum. Seventy-four entries were received, including one from Frank Lloyd Wright. The winning design submitted by Ferry & Clas of Milwaukee was for a building one block long and designed in a combination of French and Italian renaissance styles known as Neo-renaissance. The building was designed in a U-shape to provide a common entrance for the library and museum but to keep the facilities separate. Construction costs for the monumental building, now listed on the National Register of Historic Places, were $780,000. In the entrance to the library, mosaic tile floors were hand-laid by master Italian craftsmen who had settled in Milwaukee. Tessera, the small squarish pieces of colored marble or tile, were used in the entrance and in the Art, Music and Recreation Department. The tessera in the entrance floor are smaller than normal, allowing for a more detailed design. The age of the building has buckled, settled, cracked and damaged the floor and columns. In 2008, a restoration of the mosaic tile floors was begun. Some of the materials used in the interior are yellow Sienna marble, brass and stained glass (lighting fixtures), hardwoods such as oak and mahogany, and scagliola (used for the pillars). The trim on top of the wainscoting in the corridor is called “egg and dart”, and is replicated in renovated areas throughout the library. The bay leaf garland design found above the doors in the corridor is actually made of painted plaster, not carved wood.
Calvary Presbyterian Church is located in the Marquette University district of downtown Milwaukee, Wisconsin. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since 1986.DescriptionThe building was designed by Milwaukee architects Koch & Hess in Gothic Revival style and built in 1870. The body of the structure is Cream City brick, a distinct light colored brick kilned from local clay, with limestone accents and sits on a rusticated stone base. The exterior has since been painted a bright red color.Calvary Church features an indoor prayer labyrinth laid into the floor. Its design was inspired by a 12th-century labyrinth found at the Cathedral of Chartres in Chartres, France, and has eleven circuits with a rosette center.
Calvary Presbyterian Church is located in the Marquette University district of downtown Milwaukee, Wisconsin. It has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since 1986.