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Bryant-Lake Bowl

Coordinates: 44°56′54.72″N 93°17′24.52″W / 44.9485333°N 93.2901444°W / 44.9485333; -93.2901444
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bryant-Lake Bowl
Bowling lanes at Bryant-Lake
Map
Address810 West Lake St.
LocationMinneapolis, Minnesota
Coordinates44°56′54.72″N 93°17′24.52″W / 44.9485333°N 93.2901444°W / 44.9485333; -93.2901444
TypeRestaurant, theater, and bowling alley
Opened1936
Website
bryantlakebowl.com

Bryant-Lake Bowl, locally nicknamed BLB, is a bowling alley, restaurant, bar, and 90-seat theatre in Uptown Minneapolis, Minnesota. Best known for its evening entertainment and Cheap Date Night specials (two meals, drinks, and a round of bowling for $28) BLB is also a reliable brunch stop. The theatre is a venue for cabaret and wide variety of other stage productions. It is a host of the annual Minnesota Fringe Festival.

Originally a garage, the building was converted into a bowling alley in 1936. In 1959, Minnesota bowling champion Bill Drouches bought the bowling alley. Kim Bartmann bought the business in 1993, restoring the building, opening a restaurant, and converting the game room into a 90-seat theatre. In 2018, Bryant-Lake Bowl was sold by Bartmann to longtime employee Erica Gilbert.[1][2]

Bryant-Lake Bowl was featured in a 2008 episode of Food Network's Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives, hosted by Guy Fieri.[3] It has also been credited as the providing the moniker for the band Lake Street Dive. [4]

In 2004, Bryant-Lake Bowl hosted the signing ceremony for a city ordinance making Minneapolis restaurants and bars free of tobacco smoke.[5] In 2021, Bryant-Lake Bowl released an 87 second promotional video called Right Up Our Alley, made in one continuous shot by drone operator Jay Christensen, which went viral and garnered praise from several critics.[6]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "About Us". bryantlakebowl.com. Retrieved 11 May 2021.
  2. ^ Nelson, Rick (24 October 2018), "Bryant-Lake Bowl, a Lyn-Lake landmark, is changing hands", Star Tribune, Minneapolis
  3. ^ "Totally Unexpected". Food Network. Retrieved 11 May 2021.
  4. ^ Tribune, Jon Bream Star. "Lake Street Dive singer will bring her 'quieter' band to Minneapolis". Star Tribune. Retrieved 2024-02-14.
  5. ^ Crisp, Lacey (28 July 2004), "Minneapolis OKs smoking ban", The Minnesota Daily, Minneapolis and St. Paul
  6. ^ Ives, Mike (11 March 2021), "A Drone Went Bowling. Hollywood Noticed.", The New York Times, New York
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