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4.043 documents for power plant baltimore
  • Initial plans for a new Phillips Seafood Restaurant at the historic Power Plant building were approved Thursday by Baltimore's Urban Design and Architecture Review Panel. The approval is the first step in a process to bring the restaurant, which is expected to open in the fall, to the former ESPN Zone site. To make changes to the exterior of the building, developers must get a permit through Baltimore's Department of Planning. The Cordish Cos., Phillips Foods Inc., and architecture firm Design Collective Inc. need final approval from the review panel before receiving a permit, said Robert Quilter, UDARP coordinator.

  • Power Plant Live! was the place to be late Wednesday afternoon for hundreds of teenagers, 20-somethings and middle-aged adults. But the resume-toting individuals weren't enjoying a round of drinks -- they just wanted to land a job. On the heels of The Cordish Cos.' multimillion dollar investment into the popular downtown entertainment and dining district, the developer held a job fair to attract workers for the hundreds of positions that will soon become available when several new establishments open their doors in the coming weeks.

  • Energy Answers International can build a power plant in an industrial Baltimore neighborhood without obtaining air and water pollution permits, according to a preliminary ruling from the Public Service Commission. The Maryland Department of the Environment, which ordered the company to get additional permits, would not comment Wednesday on whether it will appeal the decision.

  • To: ENERGY EDITORS Contact: Kevin Thornton of Constellation Energy, +1-410-470- 2652, or Media Line: +1-410-470-7433

  • The large copper crab is back. Phillips Seafood, a Baltimore tourist landmark for more than three decades, has formally reopened in a new location at the historic Power Plant at the Inner Harbor following $2 million in renovations to the former ESPN Zone.

  • The Cordish Cos. announced Wednesday the final touches to its $10 million relaunch of Power Plant Live!, including two more restaurants and the need to hire hundreds of new employees for incoming tenants. This is the first upgrade for the venue that attracts more than 3 million visitors annually and brings in more than $35 million in sales a year, according to the company. The announcement was made at the site by Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake, Downtown Partnership of Baltimore President J. Kirby Fowler Jr., and The Cordish Cos. Chairman and President David S. Cordish.

  • The Cordish Cos. and its architectural firm are scheduled to present their design plans for a Phillips Seafood restaurant in the Power Plant space formerly occupied by the ESPN Zone Thursday afternoon, hours after the Baltimore company plans a "major announcement" at the historic Inner Harbor building. The Cordish Cos., Design Collective Inc. and Phillips Foods Inc. will provide plans for renovations and branding of the restaurant that will be reviewed by Baltimore City's Urban Design and Architecture Review Panel.

  • The operator of Babalu Grill and Blue Sea Grill announced the closing of both Power Plant Live! restaurants Monday to focus on what it says are its more successful products, the Ruth's Chris Steak House restaurants and the Havana Club in Baltimore. The Blue Sea Grill, which opened in 2003, closed on Saturday but Babalu Grill will remain open this week. Its last day of service will be Sunday, according to its Pikesville-based operator Big Steaks Management LLC. Babalu opened in 2001.

  • Chris Kelly thinks he has found a way to boost funding to Missouri school districts without raising taxes or reallocating existing dollars: He wants South Callaway schools to share their local property taxes if AmerenUE builds a new nuclear power plant there. AmerenUE and Baltimore-based UniStar Nuclear LLC are applying to build a $6 billion plant near the existing Callaway I plant. During construction, which could begin in a couple of years, the plant is expected to generate more than $150 million in annual property tax revenue, AmerenUE spokesman Mike Cleary said. The South Callaway School District, which has roughly 1,000 students, would receive the bulk of those dollars.

  • FT. WASHINGTON, Pa.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Feb. 8, 1999-- Software's Ability to Manage Facility-Wide Controlled Documents Seen as Foundation for the Fu...



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