Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tysons was dead to me when Shakey's Pizza closed. I could care less about the FUTURE video. The Mosaic has has a cool sounding name.
What if I opened a Shakeys , will that convince you and everyone on the fence?
Yes.
http://www.shakeys.com/Franchise/Default.aspx
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tysons was dead to me when Shakey's Pizza closed. I could care less about the FUTURE video. The Mosaic has has a cool sounding name.
What if I opened a Shakeys , will that convince you and everyone on the fence?
Anonymous wrote:Tysons was dead to me when Shakey's Pizza closed. I could care less about the FUTURE video. The Mosaic has has a cool sounding name.
Anonymous wrote:Say what you will, but....Tysons Corner is the largest employment center in the BaltWash region and is home to 1,200 technology companies, 25,599,065 square feet (2,378,231.0 m2) of office space, 1,072,874 square feet (99,673.3 m2) of industrial/flex space, 4,054,096 square feet (376,637.8 m2) of retail space, and 2,551,579 square feet (237,049.4 m2) of hotel space. Therefore Tysons Corner has a grand total of 33,278,014 square feet (3,091,628.7 m2) of commercial space.
The corporate headquarters of Booz Allen Hamilton, Capital One, Freddie Mac, Gannett Company, Hilton Worldwide, ITT Exelis, MicroStrategy, Primus Telecom, SAIC, Space Adventures, Spacenet, Sunrise Senior Living, and USA Today are located in Tysons Corner.
Firms with offices in Tysons Corner include BAE Systems,[24] Compuware,[25] Ernst & Young,[26] Northrop Grumman,[27] PricewaterhouseCoopers.[28] Xerox,[29] and Vie de France.[30]
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The economic vitality of Tysons and Arlington depends on a healthy center city, i.e. downtown DC. This attitude of "screw you" were the next best thing, and "your decade in the limelight is over," is not reality.
The Northern Virginia suburbs would not be as wealthy if DC was stagnant like St. Louis, Detroit, or Buffalo. DC is one of the most livable and wealthy cities in the US, and the suburbs are the beneficiaries.
Put a sock in it dc you're old news
If DC dies, Tysons dies. Rots o ruck!
DCs death after the riots caused the outer areas to blossom because the affluent left
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The economic vitality of Tysons and Arlington depends on a healthy center city, i.e. downtown DC. This attitude of "screw you" were the next best thing, and "your decade in the limelight is over," is not reality.
The Northern Virginia suburbs would not be as wealthy if DC was stagnant like St. Louis, Detroit, or Buffalo. DC is one of the most livable and wealthy cities in the US, and the suburbs are the beneficiaries.
Put a sock in it dc you're old news
If DC dies, Tysons dies. Rots o ruck!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The economic vitality of Tysons and Arlington depends on a healthy center city, i.e. downtown DC. This attitude of "screw you" were the next best thing, and "your decade in the limelight is over," is not reality.
The Northern Virginia suburbs would not be as wealthy if DC was stagnant like St. Louis, Detroit, or Buffalo. DC is one of the most livable and wealthy cities in the US, and the suburbs are the beneficiaries.
Put a sock in it dc you're old news
Anonymous wrote:The economic vitality of Tysons and Arlington depends on a healthy center city, i.e. downtown DC. This attitude of "screw you" were the next best thing, and "your decade in the limelight is over," is not reality.
The Northern Virginia suburbs would not be as wealthy if DC was stagnant like St. Louis, Detroit, or Buffalo. DC is one of the most livable and wealthy cities in the US, and the suburbs are the beneficiaries.