News

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (KRQE) — Visit Albuquerque is showing when and how neon became such a vital part of Route 66’s history. While the first functional neon sign was created by George Cloud… ...
AMERICANA. IN GARDNER, MASSACHUSETTS, KNOWN AS THE CHAIR CITY. BUT NOW IT MIGHT JUST BE ON ITS WAY TO BECOMING THE. NEON SIGN CITY. WELCOME TO A PLACE WHERE CRAFTSMANSHIP AND CREATIVITY SHINE ...
The neon signs that once illuminated Hong Kong have mostly gone dark, but Jive Lau is preserving the craft of neon making with his ambitious designs and sculptures.
Fading lights Neon signs were first introduced in Hong Kong in the 1920s. As the city’s economy flourished from the 1950s to the 1980s, neon did also, according to Brian Kwok, an associate ...
RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) — The neon, Art Deco style light-up “CARYTOWN” sign welcoming people as they drive down Cary Street is experiencing a partial blackout again.
Five historic neon signs were restored and installed in Mesa's new Neon Garden, a revitalized space at the former loading dock of the city’s historic post office. Vic Linoff, president of Mesa ...
Data analytics platform Databricks said on Wednesday that it has agreed to acquire Neon, a startup building an open source alternative to AWS Aurora Postgres, for about $1 billion.
Databricks is signaling its intent to get ahead in this next generation of app building, announcing it will purchase open-source serverless Postgres company Neon.
Mesa’s new Neon Garden at downtown community event space The Post, 26 N. Macdonald, will be unveiled during a public dedication and lighting ceremony on Thursday evening. The open-air display ...
Route 66 Neon Park, the first park dedicated to vintage neon lights in Missouri, is set to open in Saint Robert on Friday, May 9, 2025. The park will stand next to George M. Reed Roadside Park in ...
Vintage Print and Neon will officially open their doors to the new location on May 1. Bovey is inviting the community to a special celebration at the new storefront on May 3, starting at 11:00 a.m.
For roughly the first 20 years of the city’s existence, there was no neon. Neon signs came to Las Vegas in the late 1920s, according to Emily Fellmer, senior collections manager at The Neon Museum.