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One World Cafe

2003 establishments in UtahBakeries of the United StatesBakery cafésBuildings and structures in Salt Lake CityRestaurants established in 2003
Restaurants in UtahSimple living
Oneworldcafe01
Oneworldcafe01

One World Everybody Eats (OWEE) was a nonprofit community kitchen and is a foundation based in Salt Lake City, Utah. Its motto was "a hand up, not a hand out." The community kitchen concept is a restaurant based on a gift economy, allowing patrons to "pay what they can" and serving all members of the community regardless of their ability to pay. The Cafe incorporated volunteer and common-effort aspects similar to those of a community garden. The organization's stated goal was to provide all who eat high quality, all natural, simple food and to ask patrons to give fairly in exchange so that all could partake.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article One World Cafe (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

One World Cafe
300 East, Salt Lake City

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Wikipedia: One World CafeContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 40.768194444444 ° E -111.88222222222 °
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Address

300 East 41
84111 Salt Lake City
Utah, United States
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Oneworldcafe01
Oneworldcafe01
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First Presbyterian Church of Salt Lake City
First Presbyterian Church of Salt Lake City

The First Presbyterian Church of Salt Lake City is a Presbyterian Church congregation in Salt Lake City, Utah. It was founded in 1871. From 1874-1905 the church met in a building at the corner of Second South and Second East, which has since been demolished. The current red sandstone building was constructed from 1903-1905.The current church building is in the Gothic Revival style and was designed by architect Walter E. Ware. The design was patterned after Carlisle Cathedral in Carlisle, England. The exterior was built of red sandstone quarried from Red Butte Canyon. The stained glass windows were created by R. T. Giles and Co. of Minneapolis, Minnesota. The original organ was built by the Bennett Organ Company of Rock Island, IL and dedicated in a 1906 concert featuring renowned organist Clarence Eddy.The current building was first occupied in 1905, the congregation substantially enlarged, renovated, and modernized it in 1956. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980. It is also Entry No. 323 on the American Presbyterian/Reformed Historic Sites Registry. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982 as a contributing building in the South Temple Historic District. In 1875, Professor John M. Coyner founded The Collegiate Institute, a college preparatory program which met in the basement of the old church building at Second South and Second East. The institute later grew to become Westminster College.