Tag: alexandria restaurant partners

Royal Restaurant sold to Alexandria Restaurant Partners

By Lexie Jordan After nearly 120 years of being one of Old Town’s great family owned businesses, The Royal Restaurant has been sold to Alexandria...

Matt and Tony’s opens for business

By Olivia Anderson | [email protected] Anton “Tony” Schabas immigrated to the United States in 1908 after working as a cook on a German ship – and...

Holiday Gift Guide: Last second gift ideas for the holiday straggler

By Cody Mello-Klein | [email protected] Life can get busy, and sometimes that means the holiday shopping you wanted to do weeks ago is still on...

Local restaurants respond to staffing shortages: Lack of hospitality workers is...

By Katherine Hapgood |[email protected] With the world opening back up, eating out at one’s favorite local restaurant is again a reality. While this would seem...

New program offers STEM training to Lyles-Crouch students

Rosie Riveters, a local non-profit, and local restaurant group Alexandria Restaurant Partners have partnered to offer a STEM program for 443 students at Lyles-Crouch...

Mask contest week four: Name these masked Alexandrians

To encourage residents to wear cloth face masks in public, the Alexandria Times is holding a competition. Each week, we are publishing a photo...

Restaurateurs discuss Alexandria’s growing dining scene

By Missy Schrott | [email protected] During the last five years or so, Alexandria’s dining scene has shifted and evolved, easing the port city into a...

Holiday Gift Guide 2019: The procrastinator’s guide to last-minute gifting

By Eileen Abbott Even if you’re super organized, the busyness of the holiday season can make it challenging to remember everything. Just when you’re about...

Plans solidify for new waterfront restaurants

By Missy Schrott | [email protected] The specific designs for two new waterfront restaurants have come into focus since preliminary plans were approved in March. The restaurants...

The evolution of outdoor dining in Alexandria

By Missy Schrott | [email protected] When it’s not 90 degrees with 75 percent humidity and when people aren’t sprinting for cover in an impromptu thunderstorm,...