DestinAsian

CITY SCENE

FROM AN OPULENT CHAMPAGNE BAR TO A ROOFTOP AERIE WITH OPERA HOUSE VIEWS, HERE ARE FOUR NEW PLACES TO QUENCH YOUR THIRST IN THE HARBOUR CITY’S CENTRAL BUSINESS DISTRICT.

- BY NATASHA DRAGUN

Sydney’s latest downtown bars.

One of Sydney’s most storied addresses is now home to one of the city’s newest bars, with Reign ( reignqvb.com.au) holding court on the upper floor of the 1898-built Queen Victoria Building. All marble, brass, and blush, the light-filled lounge features more than 150 champagnes and sparkling wines, many of which are poured by the glass. That said, champagne connoisseu­rs may want to opt for the tasting flight of non-vintage and reserve cuvées from G. H. Mumm. The best tables are by the arched windows overlookin­g Town Hall and George Street; pull up a chair here for weekend brunch, or settle in for “high cheese,” which swaps scones and sandwiches for fromage and lavosh.

Buzzy new wine bar and restaurant the Prince of York ( princeofyo­rk.com.au) also occupies historic quarters, spread over three levels of a 19th-century former bank on York Street. The drinks list here favors bottles made with minimal interventi­on by small producers; an unconventi­onal option is the naturally fermented Zaptung prosecco from South Australia. Below the ground-floor bar, the vault’s 150-year-old safe now serves as a repository for mezcals and precious limitedrel­ease wines. End the evening in Pamela’s, a late-night basement haunt replete with pink velvet sofas and a disco ball.

Around the corner at the first overseas property for the Singapore-based Fullerton brand, The Fullerton Hotel Sydney’s The Bar ( fullertonh­otels.com) puts a fresh spin on Singapore’s classic cocktail with its Sydney Sling, a muddle of Four Pillars gin, hibiscus and ginger liqueurs, blood-orange juice, and other Australian ingredient­s. Best enjoyed with smoked-salmon mille-feuille and caviar, the colorful drink is almost as eye-catching as The Bar’s setting in the glass-roofed atrium of the former General Post Office building, a neoclassic­al landmark that now serves as the hotel’s heritage wing.

Sydney is not short on drinking establishm­ents with stellar views, but Italianins­pired Bar Ombré ( saltmeetsc­heese.com .au) stands out for its perch overlookin­g the Opera House and Harbour Bridge from the roof of Circular Quay’s Gateway dining precinct. This breezy and plant-filled establishm­ent does a brisk trade in spritzes, sours, and barrel-aged negronis, best paired with wood-baked focaccia, fried calamari, and antipasto platters loaded with burrata, anchovies, and all kinds of salumi. Be sure to make the most of the daily aperitivo-style happy hour from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m.

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Sydney Slings at The Fullerton Hotel; mixing things up at Prince of York; a “high cheese” set at Reign; views from Bar Ombré encompass the Sydney Opera House and Harbour Bridge.
Clockwise from top left: Sydney Slings at The Fullerton Hotel; mixing things up at Prince of York; a “high cheese” set at Reign; views from Bar Ombré encompass the Sydney Opera House and Harbour Bridge.
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