The Exchange 022118
Coming up next on The Exchange, we take a tour of the Sioux City’s beloved Warrior Hotel, which is soon to be returned to its former glory.
Also, we talk with author a new book about her grandmother, who 100 years ago paved the way for women to play important roles in organized labor.
Also, the Woodbury County Board of Supervisor’s changes its mind about allowing guns in the courthouse, the history of homesteading in Iowa and more. That’s coming up on The Exchange but first this news.
News/Wx
Welcome to the Exchange on Siouxland Public Media, I’m Mary Hartnett.
Downtown businesses capitalize on growing crowds by expanding
Unmute
The Crown at the Warrior Hotel
SIOUX CITY (KTIV) - Several businesses in downtown Sioux City are looking to expand to capitalize on booming business, post-pandemic.
The Warrior Hotel will host the grand opening of its rooftop bar, The Crown, this weekend. The hotel s marketing director says business for the hotel has been booming lately. This place was hopping, I m sure many of you saw on social media this place was the talk of the town, it was the place to be. We had always planned on having a rooftop open and we are very happy to share this, its a better place to live, work and play, said Lila Plambeck, head of marketing and sales at the Warrior Hotel.
Sioux City Symphony hosts Season Reveal event ktiv.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from ktiv.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
By Todd Epp
Feb 1, 2021 2:51 PM
SIOUX CITY, Iowa (KELO.com) With Valentines Day coming in two weeks, of course, one obviously thinks of Sioux City as a place to spend the romantic holiday.
There are the old stockyards. The old John Morrell plant. The Floyd River with no water in it. The crumbling Loess Hills that much of the city sits on. The pint-sized replica of the Washington Monument honoring appendicitis stricken Sgt. Floyd of the Lewis and Clark Expedition. The remaining sand deposited from the 2011 Missouri River flood, to name just a few delights. And, of course, what says “I love you!” more than the never-ending road construction on I-29?