New York Post

Very high cuisine

Jean-Georges is latest Billionair­es’ Row chef

- By JENNIFER GOULD KEIL jgould@nypost.com

What’s better than living in one of those fancy skyscraper­s on Billionair­es’ Row? Well, consider a dinner that’s just an elevator ride away — at a private restaurant helmed by a Michelin-starred chef.

In September, world-famous chef JeanGeorge­s Vongericht­en (inset) will open a residentso­nly restaurant at 220 Central Park South — the swanky new tower designed by starchitec­t Robert A.M. Stern where the most expensive home in US history recently got sold.

That’s despite the fact that, just a few hundred feet away on the other side of Columbus Circle, Vongericht­en continues to run his famous flagship eatery, JeanGeorge­s, at the Trump Internatio­nal Hotel & Tower.

“Who can’t cross the street to Jean-Georges?” one amazed real estate broker asked after learning of Vongericht­en’s 58-seat, private-dining enclave on the building’s second floor.

Apparently, it’s the wellheeled denizens of 220 Central Park South, including Sting and hedge fund tycoon Ken Griffin, who bought the US’s priciest-ever apartment there this spring for $238 million.

“It’s an exclusive amenity that is attractive to ultra-high net-worth buyers,” Pamela Liebman, Chief Executive of Corcoran, says of private restaurant­s. “You never have to leave the building. You can go right downstairs and know that everything will be perfect.”

Two blocks south at 225 W. 57th St., developer Gary Barnett’s Central Park Tower — which will become the tallest residentia­l building in the world at 1,550 feet when it opens next year — will boast a private restaurant on its 100th floor, right next to the ballroom and cigar bar.

“It’s going to be stunning,” gushed a broker.

Meanwhile, 432 Park Ave. — soaring 1,396 feet — has a residents-only eatery (pictured here with its Michelin-starred chef Shaun Hergatt, inset).

The 12th-floor venue spans 8,500 square feet and comes with a 4,000-square-foot terrace. The menu is varied and changes often, and if you have a private party, Hergatt can cater it.

“Breakfast is free. Everything else you pay for,” said Douglas Elliman broker Alexander Boriskin, who, with DE’s Michael Lorber, is colisting a 62nd-floor, $28 million unit in the building.

“Residents who don’t think they would be eating there often quickly change their tune once they move in and try it,” Boriskin added.

“They even import their own types of butter, one of which is buckwheat,” adds Lorber. “It’s amazing!”

Neverthele­ss, private, inbuilding restaurant­s aren’t everyone’s cup of tea, and some experts aren’t sure the chefs will last. “They do well the first year but they can fizzle out quickly,” said Ed Mermelstei­n, who owns advisory firm One & Only Holdings. “As an owner, how often will you eat in your own building?”

Developer Aby Rosen’s 711-foot tower at 100 E. 53rd St. doesn’t have a residentso­nly restaurant, but it does have two private dining rooms on the second floor that can be accessed from a private residents’ elevator, said Leonard Steinberg of Compass.

Meals there can be catered by the buildings’ two restaurant­s that are open to the public: Le Jardinier and Shun, run by top chef Alain Verzeroli, a protégé of the late, great chef Joël Robuchon.

“Too often, residents-only restaurant­s look like ghost towns, which is depressing at best,” Steinberg said. “And from a political perspectiv­e, being so exclusiona­ry these days seems so out of touch.”

While residents-only restaurant­s are drawing attention lately, they’ve actually been around since at least the 1920s.

“The Dakota at 1 West 72nd St. had a legendary private dining room where Lauren Bacall would often do lunch with her celebrity friends,” said top broker Dolly Lenz. “Unfortunat­ely, that was converted and sold a while ago.”

WE HEAR … that Jayma Cardoso, the Brazilian proprietor of Montauk’s famed Surf Lodge, will be helming the kitchen this Tuesday for a private event at the hotel, personally preparing a dinner for 90 people. The menu, which she chose, features appetizers like watermelon feta salad, yellowfin seared tuna and heirloom tomatoes. The mains will include roasted coconut curry cauliflowe­r and Brazilian picanha steak.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States