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218 Bowery: City: New York City: State: New York: Postal/ZIP Code: 10012: ... Rebelle was a restaurant in New York City. [3] The restaurant had received a Michelin ...
342 Bowery: City: New York City: State: New York: Postal/ZIP Code: 10003: ... Yoshino is a Japanese restaurant in New York City serving omakase [2] [3] by head chef ...
Guests at the fete included Barbara Walters (Shevell's second cousin, who introduced the couple), then–New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg, Ralph Lauren, Yoko Ono, and Sean Lennon. [3] The painter Domingo Zapata has kept an art studio atop the hotel. [4] The restaurant in the hotel is Gemma. [5] Pets weighing 30 lbs. or less are allowed. [6]
The Atlantic Garden was a beer garden and music hall established by William Kramer in 1858 at what is now 50 Bowery in the Chinatown neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City. It was next to the Bowery Theatre , on the site of the Bull's Head Tavern (formerly headquarters for New York's cattle market) and the New York Hotel. [ 1 ]
Mile End Sandwich, a spin-off restaurant of Mile End Delicatessen, the Jewish deli in Brooklyn, is located on Bond Street between Bowery and Lafayette Street. [2] The Robbins & Appleton Building is located at the western end of the street, at 1–5 Bond Street, [6]: 255 while the Bond Street Savings Bank is at the eastern end at 54 Bond Street.
The Bowery Ballroom is a New York City live music venue located at 6 Delancey Street in Manhattan's Bowery neighborhood. The venue has enjoyed a fabled reputation among musicians as well as audiences. [ 1 ]
The venue was able to reopen after a month of negotiation with city officials. [8] After the previous tenant's rent increased, the venue was acquired by the New York-based concert promotion company Bowery Presents in the beginning of 2007. The venue was remodeled, renovated and renamed Music Hall of Williamsburg. [9] [10]
97 Bowery is a five-story loft building on the Bowery between Hester and Grand Streets in the Lower East Side and Chinatown neighborhoods of Manhattan, New York City. The building was designed by Peter L.P. Tostevin in the Italianate style , and was built in 1869 for John P. Jube & Co., which occupied it until 1935.