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Though it delayed the grand opening of his Tin Building by Jean-Georges food hall in South Street Seaport, the pandemic actually offered him the opportunity to double down on an area that few fine ...
[43] [52] [53] Jean-Georges, a Michelin-starred restaurant, [54] [55] serves New French cuisine. [56] The Jean-Georges restaurant space was designed by Adam Tihany, who arranged the space with both a cafe and a main dining room. [53] Adjacent to it is Nougatine, a bar also operated by Vongerichten. [57]
Jean-Georges is a two-Michelin-star [2] [3] restaurant at 1 Central Park West (between West 60th Street and West 61st Street), on the lobby level of the Trump International Hotel and Tower, on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, New York City, named after its owner Jean-Georges Vongerichten.
Mailing's was built in 1930 and designed by S. Charles Lee, the same architect who designed the Los Angeles Theatre that this building shares its northern wall with. In 1979, when the Broadway Theater and Commercial District was added to the National Register of Historic Places, both Mailing's and Los Angeles Theater were listed as separate contributing properties in the district.
The drama has never left the dance floor at Tin Roof in Myrtle Beach. For over two years, the building that houses the iconic entertainment venue, one of the only live music spots on the ocean ...
The Modern is a residential skyscraper complex in Fort Lee, New Jersey near George Washington Bridge Plaza at the western end of the George Washington Bridge (GWB) on the Hudson Waterfront. Situated atop the Hudson Palisades, the twin towers provide panoramic views of the New York City skyline, the Hudson River, the GWB, and surrounding suburbs.
ABC Kitchen is a restaurant in the Flatiron District of Manhattan in New York City founded in 2010 by Jean-Georges Vongerichten. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] [ 4 ] The restaurant received the James Beard Foundation Award for Best New Restaurant .
Sarah Bates Ellis purchased it in 1717. Her son, Joseph Ellis, farmed the land until his death in 1757. His son-in-law, Jacob Stokes, owned the property in 1761 and enlarged the house by adding the southern part that year. It remained in the Stokes family until 1828, when it was sold to George Lee. [3]