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Bouley was a contemporary French restaurant located at 163 Duane Street (between Greenwich Street and Hudson Street), in Tribeca in Manhattan, in New York City. [2] [3] David Bouley was its owner and chef. [1] [4] It initially opened in 1987 at 154 Duane Street and was closed in 1996. [5]
Bouley Test Kitchen is a private event and testing learning center for visiting guest chefs and for developing recipes for the Bouley enterprises. The facilities were used by the American Team for the Bocuse d'Or Competition 2011. [6] It was relocated from TriBeCa, lower Manhattan, to the Flatiron District in October 2017.
Bouley at Home was a Michelin-starred restaurant in the Flatiron District of Manhattan in New York City. [1] [2] See also
Brushstroke was a Japanese kaiseki restaurant located on Hudson Street in Manhattan, New York City. The owners of the restaurant were French chef David Bouley and Yoshiki Tsuji, who is president of Tsuji culinary school in Osaka, Japan. Sushi Ichimura at brushstroke was opened inside of the restaurant Brushstoke in 2012.
The Roebling Building is an industrial structure at 169 Hudson Street in the Tribeca neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City.Dating to the late 19th or early 20th century, it was named after the John A. Roebling family, known for their work in wire rope manufacturing, most notably used in the construction of the Brooklyn Bridge.
Café Boulud is a French restaurant located at 100 East 63rd Street on the Upper East Side in Manhattan, in New York City. It is owned by French celebrity chef and restaurateur Daniel Boulud. [1] Boulud is New York City's longest-tenured four-star chef. [2]
Before founding The Odeon, Lynn Wagenknecht, Keith McNally, and Brian McNally all worked at One Fifth, another Manhattan restaurant. [4] Keith McNally and Wagenknecht developed the idea for The Odeon while on a vacation in Paris in 1979. [4] The Odeon opened in 1980, in space previously occupied by Towers Cafeteria.
The Gideon Tucker House, also known as 2 White Street, is an historic house at the corner of West Broadway and White Street in the TriBeCa neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City. The Federal style house was built in 1808–09 by Gideon Tucker, who oversaw its construction and lived in the house once it was complete. Tucker was a city Alderman ...