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Storehouse Furniture was founded in Atlanta, Georgia, in 1969, and it quickly became an early style leader in well-designed, well-priced contemporary furnishings. [ citation needed ] In fact, it was Storehouse that brought many of today's best international manufacturers to the United States for the first time.
Look up storehouse in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Storehouse may refer to: Storehouse plc, a British retail conglomerate. Warehouse, a building for storing goods. Category:
Storehouse plc, traded as Storehouse, was a large UK retail business formed by Terence Conran through the merger of various high street chains. It was listed on the London Stock Exchange and was once a constituent of the FTSE 100 Index before it was renamed Mothercare in 2000.
Kura storehouse in Kitakata with tiled roof. Kura ( 倉 or 蔵) are traditional Japanese storehouses. They are commonly durable buildings built from timber, stone or clay used to safely store valuable commodities. Kura in rural communities are normally of simpler construction and used for storing grain or rice. Those in towns are more elaborate ...
Guinness Storehouse is a tourist attraction at St. James's Gate Brewery in Dublin, Ireland. [2] [3] Since opening in 2000, it has received over twenty million visitors. [4] [5] The Storehouse covers seven floors surrounding a glass atrium shaped in the form of a pint of Guinness. [6] The ground floor introduces the beer's four ingredients ...
A bishop's storehouse in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) usually refers to a commodity resource center that is used by bishops (lay leaders of local congregations analogous to pastors or parish priests in other Christian denominations) of the church to provide goods to needy individuals. The storehouses stock basic ...
The Blair's Ferry Storehouse is a Federal-style two-story building with a stepped brick facade and gable roof. The building was originally rectangular, measuring 25 feet (7.6 m) by 58 feet (18 m) (including the porch in the back), although a 16-foot (4.9 m) wing addition to the south wall in the 1930s gave the building an "L" shape.
The Storehouse No. 2 is a historic warehouse located in the Sunset Park neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York. It was a building in the United States Navy Fleet supply base that was built during World War I. It was built in 1917 by Turner Construction, and is an eight-story, reinforced concrete building in the Classical Revival style.