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The actual namesake of the street is undetermined. It may have been named for city surveyor William Bond, or for a mention in an 1817 guidebook referring to Broadway as "The Bond Street of New York". [3] 24 Bond Street was the location of Beatrice and Sam Rivers' studio RivBea [4] and of Robert Mapplethorpe's first studio. [5] Mile End Sandwich ...
The 2006 edition was the first edition of the Michelin Guide to New York City to be published. It was the first time that Michelin published a Red Guide for a region outside Europe. [4] In the 2020 edition, the Guide began to include restaurants outside the city's five boroughs, adding Westchester County restaurants to its listing. [5]
In High-Change in Bond Street (1796), James Gillray caricatured the lack of courtesy on Bond Street (young men taking up the whole footpath), which was a grand fashionable milieu at the time. There is evidence of Roman settlement around what is now Bond Street. In 1894, a culvert made from brick and stone was discovered in the area. [7]
The restaurant, on the ground floor of the Fifth Avenue Hotel, a building designed by McKim, Mead & White, has double-height ceilings, but as at all of Carmellini’s restaurants, there is nothing ...
In the 1963 Ian Fleming story "Agent 007 in New York", James Bond refers to Lutèce as "one of the great restaurants of the world". Referenced in Linda Fairstein's NY-based mystery series, especially Night Watch (2012). In it a renowned French restaurateur, son of the owner of a fictitious Lutèce, sets out to reopen the restaurant.
Lord's is a British [2] restaurant in New York City. [3] [4] [5] It was named one of twelve best new restaurants in the United States by Eater in 2023. [6] The restaurant is located near Dame, a restaurant established by the same group that runs Lord's. [7]
PDT, also known as Please Don't Tell, is a speakeasy-style cocktail bar in the East Village of Manhattan, New York City. The bar is often cited as the first speakeasy-style bar and thus originator of the modern speakeasy trend, [1] [2] and has influenced the American bar industry in numerous ways, [3] including beginning a sea change in New York City's cocktail culture. [2]
The idea for a new Boulud restaurant at One Vanderbilt began around 2017, when the skyscraper's developer approached Boulud about opening a restaurant there. Le Pavillon opened on May 19, 2021, the same day New York allowed restaurants to open at full capacity after 14 months of restricted dining during the COVID-19 pandemic.