Texas-based Fuzzy s Taco Shop to open first Minnesota location
The North Loop restaurant will open in April
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Fuzzy s Taco Shop
A Texas-based taco joint will be opening its first Minnesota location in the North Loop neighborhood of Minneapolis.
The 18-year-old franchise Fuzzy s Taco Shop says it will be launching a mini version of its typical 3,000-4,000-square-foot restaurant, which it will call Fuzzy s Taqueria.
The fast-casual, 1,100-square-foot spot inside the Loose-Wiles building on Washington Avenue is set to open next month.
Rendering of the Fuzzy s Tacqueria layout, which is the model the company will open in MInneapolis
Fuzzy s Taco Shop
Herald Democrat
Crews with Victron Energy, a Waxahachie-based fuel distributor, have cleared the road for construction of a new travel center and fueling station to begin next week. Officials with the city of Denison announced a groundbreaking ceremony for the long-awaited project will be held on Wednesday, formally beginning the construction phase of the development.
The travel center, located at the intersection of State Highway 91 and U.S. Highway 75, has been an anticipated project for the city of Denison, who formally announced the project in early 2020. However, groundwork on the project dates back into mid 2019 as city officials updated city ordinance definitions to define this kind of development.
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A car caught on fire Thursday afternoon in the parking deck above Fuzzyâs Taco Shop, located on North Lumpkin Street. The exact cause of the fire is unknown. The time frame in which the fire began is yet to be determined. No reported injuries or casualties according to Athens Clarke County Fire Department. It is unknown if nearby cars were damaged by the fire.Â
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In May 2020, confronting a raging pandemic, fierce competition from a slew of new entrants in the alternative-beverage category, and a limited marketing budget to support the launch of three new drink flavors, Ben Witte, CEO and founder of Recess, a maker of CBD-infused sparkling water, did what the head of any up-and-coming direct-to-consumer brand might: He dropped a merch line.
Featuring a “last two brain cells” hoodie ($65), a “cool your horses” T-shirt ($35), an orange “on recess” beanie, and a pair of $18 “around the block” socks (“for going nowhere in particular”), the line was designed, says Witte, with Instagram and Gen Z “creatives” in mind, a way to diffuse the brand’s pastel-minimalist aesthetic and the “tongue-in-cheek social commentary on millennial existence” on social media and beyond. Generating hundreds of tagged stories and posts a month, the merch did exactly what the brand had intended: For a CBD company operating in an advertising