Noho
NoHo is a small yet culturally ripe, culinarily bestowed, commercially diverse, historically significant neighborhood, with a whole host of diversions in the few blocks bound by Broadway, the Bowery, Astor Place and Houston Street. Fun fact for art aficionados: Keith Haring painted his first mural on the area’s signature “gallery wall” on the corner of Bowery and Houston. The area today is still just as vibrant.
Merchant's House Museum
La Colombe
The Future Perfect
MUJI
The Public Theater
Mile End Sandwich Shop
This hip, deli from Montreal serves up modern versions of classic Jewish comfort food.
Café Angelique
Bite
The Smile
il Buco Alimentari & Vineria
B Bar & Grill
Astor Wine & Spirits
The Hole
Lafayette
Japan Premium Beef
Bond No. 9
Adore Floral
Colonnade Row
Vic's
Love Thy Beast
Dashwood Books
Alta
Simple, elegant Mexican classics populate the menu in the simple, elegant space.
Bowery Electric
Bowery Electric is arguably the most famous still-standing music venue in NoHo.
Cooper Union
The institution, long known for churning out Nobel Prize laureates and Fulbright Scholars, is dedicated to Peter Cooper's founding vision that fair access to an inspiring free education and forums for courageous public discourse foster a just and thriving world.
Bowery Mural Wall
Bowery Poetry Club
Started in 2002 with a grungier feel, the Bowery Poetry club is now and elegant evening experience with a little something for everyone.
Public Theater
The Public Theater is a much-loved, nonprofit performance theater known for developing, producing and importing innovative work (and also for its iconic Paula Scher-designed identity and branding).
Saxon + Parole
There may be no more beautiful place in NYC to have a burger with a side of fancy drinks than Saxon + Parole.
Explore more neighborhoods
Colonnade Row
- Address
- 8 East 8th Street
- Free Lyft
- Free Lyft
LaGrange Terrace, more commonly known as Colonnade Row, originally consisted of nine row houses built for New York’s fashionable elite (think of the Astors and the Vanderbilts) back when Lafayette ended at Great Jones Street. Today only four of the homes remain. Built in the early 19th-century, this Greek Revival architectural marvel was one of the first historic landmarks registered in New York, yet today it struggles to maintain its poise. Sharply renovated on the inside (1-bedroom apartments go for upwards of $4,000), the marble Corinthian columns on the exterior are now cracked and crumbling.