place

Ultraviolet (restaurant)

Michelin Guide starred restaurants in ChinaRestaurants established in 2012Restaurants in Shanghai

Ultraviolet by Paul Pairet is a single-table restaurant in Shanghai, China, opened in May 2012 by French chef Paul Pairet and the VOL Group. Since October 2014 Ultraviolet became one of the restaurant members of Les Grandes Tables du Monde, the first restaurant in this organization from China. In September 2017, the second edition of Michelin Guide Shanghai released the result for 2018, and Ultraviolet received 3 Michelin stars.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Ultraviolet (restaurant) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Ultraviolet (restaurant)
Yan'an Road Tunnel, Huangpu District

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Ultraviolet (restaurant)Continue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 31.238 ° E 121.489 °
placeShow on map

Address

延安东路隧道

Yan'an Road Tunnel
200002 Huangpu District
China
mapOpen on Google Maps

Share experience

Nearby Places

Nissin Building
Nissin Building

The Nissin Building (Chinese: 日清大楼) is a six-storey building on the Bund, Shanghai, China. The building is located at Number 5, the Bund at the junction of the Bund and Guangdong Road). The site of the building is 1280 square metres, formerly used by a Japanese fire insurance company and had undergone numerous reselling between several British firms.The building was initially planned by the Japanese shipping company Nisshin Kisen Kaisha Shipping Co. There was a lack of funding but a Jewish merchant agreed to pay half the costs of construction, and funded the construction of three of its stories. Construction of the building started in 1921 and it was completed in 1925. The architectural firm was Lester, Johnson and Morriss. It has a floor space of 5484 square metres. One of the earliest applicants for a space in the new building was a Japanese entrepreneur who wished to open a Turkish bath and restaurant in part of the basement. After the Second World War the China Merchants Steam Navigation Company took over the building. The building became owned by Shanghai Maritime Bureau shortly after the establishment of the People's Republic of China in 1949. The bureau continued to use the building until the 1990s when it moved to an office tower Pudong and this building was leased to different firms, most notably the Bund branch of Huaxia Bank and a gate was added to the south. The building's façade consists both Japanese and Western elements and is completely covered in granite. The décor is much simpler in the lower three stories than above, which features reliefs and granite columns.