For catering inquiries, general suggestions, or to just show us some love, please e-mail: [email protected]
Third Floor Café is a bar-lounge located in New York City's Koreatown.
Franchia, the sister restaurant of Hangawi in New York City, is a casual take on refined Asian fusion vegan dining. Franchia is the place to be for a quick bite, an indulgent afternoon tea or a relaxing evening of dining with friends and family.
2Beans is the premier NYC destination for high-quality, hand-selected chocolates from around the world, expertly prepared illy coffee as well as carefully selected international wines. 2Beans believes having passion means fully understanding the places, the people, and the processes behind our items, especially our chocolates. That's why our guests have the opportunity to learn more about each chocolate we offer when they visit us. We invite you to try a new chocolate bar, enjoy an espresso at our sit-down coffee bar, or relax in our loft seating with a gourmet sandwich or a glass of wine.
Potbelly Sandwich Shop - Good vibes, great sandwiches at your neighborhood sandwich shop.
http://madhousenyc.com Innovative editors, artists, producers & bleeding edge tech, creating high end visual media -- mad.house makes content 'do more'
We are a unique company specializing in mobile, social, interactive tv, and online media. In a marketplace that demands constant communication and innovation, BlippMedia keeps your company ahead of the competition.
The Tiffany and Company Building is the landmarked former home of the Tiffany and Company store at 401 Fifth Avenue, Manhattan, New York City, New York.This building, completed in 1906, served as the home of Tiffany until 1940. Today, a TD Bank branch, tchotchke shop, and Burger King occupy the ground level. The People's Court is filmed on a set inside the building.The building was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1978.
View Menu: https://orders.9fold.me/moonstruck-madison.html
Morgans is the hotel that changed all the rules. From the moment it opened its doors on Madison Avenue, it startled the world with a convention-shattering attitude and distinctive design sensibility. This grand experiment in style was first concocted by legendary designer Andrée Putman, then again in 2008, when she unveiled a new vision for Morgans. Her powerful reinterpretation of the first “boutique hotel” propels Morgans’ style and spirit forward without changing its unique character. Design additions include an art installation created by the French design collective Trafik, where autonomous programming projects random patterns and colors onto the ceiling during the day. In the evening, guests can make their own light-art experience in real time. The new design of the hotel interior reinterprets the original monochromatic palette with rich gradations of white, gray and black. Armchairs and foldable lacquered tables by the 1930s designer Jean-Michel Frank accent the lobby, while the elevator and corridors offer another moment of quiet ambience with soft lighting elements that give a rhythm to the space.
The Joseph Raphael De Lamar House is a mansion located at 233 Madison Avenue at the corner of 37th Street in the Murray Hill neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City. It was built in 1902-05 and was designed by C. P. H. Gilbert in the Beaux-Arts style. The De Lamar Mansion marked a stark departure from Gilbert's traditional style of French Gothic architecture and was instead robustly Beaux-Arts, heavy with rusticated stonework, balconies and a colossal mansard roof. The mansion is the largest in Murray Hill and one of the most spectacular in the city; the interiors are as lavish as the exterior.HistoryJoseph Raphael De Lamar was a Dutch-born merchant seaman who made his first fortune in mining and metallurgy during the 1870s-80s silver-lead rushes to Colorado and Idaho, and 1890s gold strikes at Mercur, Utah and Delamar, Nevada. He had this residence built as his entré into New York society. It was to be a family residence, but soon after it was built De Lamar and his wife divorced. The 1910 census taker found De Lamar in residence with his daughter Alice, by then 15, and nine servants, a typical ratio for the time. De Lamar died eight years later in 1918 at the age of 75. His obituary in The Boston Daily Globe described him as a "man of mystery" and an accomplished organist. He left an estate worth $29 million to his daughter, who continued living in the house for a short time before moving to an apartment at 740 Park Avenue.