Bottletree: Difference between revisions

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==References==
==References==
* "New Hangout" (July 13, 2006) ''Black & White'' "Urban Living 2006" special advertising section.
* "New Hangout" (July 13, 2006) ''Black & White'' "Urban Living 2006" special advertising section
* Harvey, Alec. [http://www.al.com/dining/birminghamnews/index.ssf?/base/entertainment/1170411822135990.xml&coll=2 "Chili, no carne, wins]."  February 2, 2007, The ''[[Birmingham News]]''.
* Harvey, Alec (February 2, 2007) [http://www.al.com/dining/birminghamnews/index.ssf?/base/entertainment/1170411822135990.xml&coll=2 "Chili, no carne, wins]."  ''Birmingham News''
* Colurso, Mary (July 31, 2009) "[http://blog.al.com/mcolurso/2009/07/for_birminghams_bottletree_the.html For Birmingham's Bottletree, the glass is still half full]."  ''Birmingham News''


==External links==
==External links==

Revision as of 12:33, 31 July 2009

Bottletree, November 2008

Bottletree is a restaurant, art gallery and nightclub, officially opened in December 2006 at 3719 3rd Avenue South in the building formerly housing Za Za Zann and Misconceptions. The new venue is owned by sibling-partners Brad and Merilee Challiss and has hosted several private events, fund-raisers, and BYOB concerts in the lead-up to its official opening. The name is intended to evoke southern folk tradition while the operation is intended to combine the best of southern hospitality with the casual lifestyle of a European neighborhood cafe (with state-of-the-art sound and video presentation).

The Bottletree cafe, open for lunch and dinner, features fresh vegetarian dishes made with locally-grown produce, as well as limited deli offerings. In February 2007, Bottletree's vegetarian chili won The Birmingham News Championship Chili contest, having been nominated by readers and beating out five other (non-vegetarian) finalists. The art gallery displays folk art and contemporary works, and the lounge books nationally-known touring acts as well as stand-up comedy, independent film screenings, and the occassional Atari or Wii video game tournament.

The Alabama Public Television program We Have Signal originates from Bottletree.

References

External links