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L'Abeille

2022 establishments in New York CityMichelin Guide starred restaurants in ManhattanNew York City restaurant stubsRestaurants established in 2022Tribeca

L'Abeille (stylized l'abeille) is a Michelin starred restaurant in New York City. The restaurant's name means "bee" in French, a reference to chef Mitsunobu Nagae's childhood nickname, Mitsu, the Japanese word for honey. The restaurant opened in March 2022.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article L'Abeille (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

L'Abeille
Greenwich Street, New York Manhattan

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 40.721888888889 ° E -74.009944444444 °
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Greenwich Street 415
10013 New York, Manhattan
New York, United States
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Area (nightclub)

Area was a themed nightclub that operated from 1983 to 1987 at 157 Hudson Street in Manhattan, New York City. The club was known for its unusual invitations.The club was founded by brothers Eric Goode and Christopher Goode, Shawn Hausman and Darius Azari. The brick building housing Area was originally built in 1866 to house the stables of American Express.Area was the first nightclub using themed decors that on average changed every six weeks. Some of the themes were "art", "suburbia", and "disco". The art department was headed by Eric and Jennifer Goode, Serge Becker, and performance and visual artists. The venue was open from Wednesday to Saturday, 11 pm till 4 am, with Wednesday nights reserved to special parties for Brian Ferry, Interview Magazine, as well as celebrity birthday parties. The life of the club is chronicled in the book Area: 1983-1987 by Eric and Jennifer Goode.Area attracted many celebrities. Stephen Saben and Michael Musto, writing for Details magazine and The Village Voice respectively, chronicled the doings there. Musto's book, Downtown. looked back on the phenomenon. There are several mentions of Area in Andy Warhol's diaries. Ben Buchanan was the official photographer for the club and was there most nights documenting the scene. These photos were in Details every month and often in the New York Post and Daily News. In February 1985, Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Jonathan Larson conceived of his unpublished musical Superbia while in Area's projectionist's booth.