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Tracy Anderson Method (Tribeca)

Tribeca, New York City, New York

why we love it

No goop wellness list would be complete without Tracy Anderson—Gwyneth’s longtime friend and trusted trainer. Opened in 2009, her Tribeca studio brings the world-renowned Tracy Anderson Method (TAM) to life through signature classes like muscular design,  dance cardio, and multitask Band (featuring her proprietary Iso-Kinetic Band System), along with private training. The space spans three levels, with signature Super G floors, private training rooms, women's locker rooms, and a retail area. As with all Tracy Anderson studios, classrooms are kept at controlled heat and humidity, meant to support performance and results.

Originally featured in The Lower Manhattan Guide, The Healthy NYC Guide, The New York City Fitness Guide

category

Health And Beauty

price

$$$$

Tracy Anderson Method (Tribeca)

271 Church St., Tribeca

phone number

646.964.5820

hours

Mon-Fri: 6am-8pm

Sat-Sun: 7am-3pm

visit website

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BOA Pilates

BOA Pilates

Private studio address provided upon booking

BOA Pilates is an under-the-radar spot whispered about by your most in-the-know friends, the ones whose results do the advertising. Founded by Chelsea DeLay, it blends classical Pilates with athletic, functional movement—drawing from her background that includes teaching at Forma Pilates and creating Equinox's group Pilates Rise format. The Greenwich Village studio has just six reformers, keeping classes small and highly personalized. This isn't for beginners; the pace and specificity demand a strong baseline. DeLay's schedule fills quickly, but it's worth joining the waitlist, booking with her co-instructor Brittni Tucker, or taking a mat class with one of the vetted rotating instructors. And now, you can use goop as a referral when putting your name on the waitlist. You’re welcome.

Core Culture

Core Culture

146 Sullivan St., New York
Mon-Thurs: 7am-7:30pm
Fri: 8am-7pm
Sat: 8:30am-5pm
Sun: 9:30am-5pm

Core Culture Pilates in SoHo offers a more traditional, technique-first approach—a quieter alternative to the city's many athletic, fast-paced studios. Classes are rooted in classical Pilates principles, with a strong focus on alignment, control, and precision. Movements are slow and deliberate, to ensure you're working the right muscles rather than relying on momentum. It's also great for beginners: the slower pace makes it easier to learn proper form from the start.

Erika Bloom Pilates

Erika Bloom Pilates

104 Franklin St., Floor 2, New York
Look at class schedule on their website

This longtime Pilates mainstay in NYC is known for its deeply individualized, almost clinical approach. Founded by former professional dancer Erika Bloom, the studio focuses on alignment, strength, and overall health through highly tailored private or duet-based sessions (no group classes). The Erika Bloom Method blends classical Pilates with somatic practices like Feldenkrais, often addressing posture, injury, or long-term imbalances. What sets it apart is its curated Wellness Collective—a coordinated group of movement, bodywork, and healing experts—which allows clients to integrate different modalities seamlessly. To book, email a practitioner directly or reach out to studio@erikabloom.com.

ETHĒA

ETHĒA

57 Leonard St., New York
Mon-Thurs: 6am-7pm
Fri: 6am-6:30pm
Sat-Sun: 8:30am-2pm

ETHĒA is the newly opened, infrared-heated boutique studio in the heart of Tribeca that the city's most in-the-know fitness crowd has been buzzing about. The offerings are refined and intentional with three elevated classes, including infrared-heated sculpt, mat Pilates, and strength. Every class is meticulously structured, and every movement serves a distinct purpose. The result is a workout that feels focused, challenging, and deeply effective. One more thing worth noting: Heated studios can turn smelly fast; this one never does.

Flatiron Pilates

Flatiron Pilates

Private studio address provided upon booking

Flatiron Pilates, founded by Amy Nelms, is one of the best classical Pilates experiences in NYC for its highly technical, deeply personalized approach. Nelms offers private sessions only, held in her minimalist, light-filled Flatiron studio and typically arranged via Instagram DM or via email at amy@flatironpilates.com. With over 25 years of experience, she reads the body quickly—identifying imbalances, posture issues, and movement patterns within minutes—and tailors each session to how your body moves. She brings a true teaching mindset to the work, explaining what's happening and why, often giving "homework" so it continues beyond the session. It's a place to refine rather than just sweat, focusing on corrective movements—but you still leave pleasantly sore, without ever feeling you pushed too hard.

Forma Pilates (SoHo)

Forma Pilates (SoHo)

Private studio address provided upon booking

Forma Pilates is likely the name your most fit, Pilates-obsessed girlfriends drop when the subject turns to working out. Born in LA with a devoted, A-list clientele (think: Hailey Bieber, Kendall Jenner, and the like), Forma has built its reputation on a rigorous, results-driven method. Its SoHo studio runs a 55-minute class across 10 reformers, with a keen emphasis on form, technique, and posture—targeting small muscle groups until you're shaking by the end. Forma also has an Upper East Side studio with only five reformers, as opposed to SoHo's ten. Classes don't come cheap, but the instructors are among the finest anywhere, and it shows. Worth knowing: This isn't a place to start your Pilates journey, and in-studio sessions are referral-only (waitlist here), though anyone can access the online classes.

Fuze House (Tribeca)

Fuze House (Tribeca)

158 Duane St., New York
Mon-Sun: 6am-8pm

For fans of heated workouts, Fuze House offers a great low-impact, high-intensity class centered on mat Pilates and sculpt—all in an infrared-heated space. The studio has a soft, Miami-like palette of pale pinks and beiges, complete with Bala equipment for a clean, cohesive look. The Tribeca location features fantastic instructors, a full floor of locker rooms, and luxurious amenities.

Marieva Studio

Marieva Studio

Private studio address provided upon booking

Marieva Studio, founded by Marieva Malo, is another of the best classical Pilates experiences in NYC. A master instructor who trained under Erika Bloom and helped open Forma's New York studios, Malo is a go-to for those wanting a very alignment-focused class. Her Upper East Side studio feels more like a private apartment than a fitness space—just two reformers, with sessions limited to privates and duets. Blending a classical foundation with her background as a third-generation dancer, she focuses on alignment, articulation, and balance—you move through exercises that work your body in subtle ways, and will likely feel sore in places you didn't know you could access. To book, email: concierge@marieva.studio

Natural Pilates (Upper East Side)

Natural Pilates (Upper East Side)

244 E. 84th St., 4th Floor, New York
Mon: 6am-8pm
Tues: 6:30am-7:30pm
Wed: 6am-8pm
Thurs: 6:30am-7:45pm
Fri: 6am-6pm
Sat: 8am-3pm
Sun: 8:30am-3:30pm

Natural Pilates is one of our go-to studios on the UES for an athletic, full-body workout that feels thoughtful and well-structured. It isn't trying to be fancy; it's just a reliably great workout. The method blends classical Pilates with physical therapy-informed movement, with a strong emphasis on alignment, control, and injury prevention. It’s suitable for all levels: instructors tailor each session, adjusting props and spring resistance to dial intensity up or down.

NoFar Method (Flatiron)

NoFar Method (Flatiron)

15 W. 18th St., 2nd Floor, New York
Mon-Thurs: 6:30am-8:30pm
Fri: 6:30am-7:30am
Sat 8am-5pm
Sun: 9am-5pm

Nofar Method is one of the more distinctive Pilates workouts in NYC, built around a signature 50-minute class that alternates between the reformer and the Cadillac. Founded by Nofar Hagag—a former Division I athlete who developed the method in medical school—it takes an advanced, anatomy-driven approach that's both technical and high-intensity. Quick transitions, varied sequences, and props keep you working strength, flexibility, and control all at once. There's also an infrared sauna with two lounge chairs available to book. This is a perfect class for beginner to intermediate skill levels.

Pilates by Stef

Pilates by Stef

161 Water St., New York
Check class schedule

Pilates by Stef is one of our go-to Pilates classes in NYC for its technique-driven, athletic approach and strong sense of community (the city views from the studio don't hurt, either). Led by Stef Bertoncini at Water Street Athletics, the reformer classes blend classical Pilates with strength and functional movement. Stef is very hands-on—constantly correcting your positioning so you feel the muscles you’re supposed to be activating—and the programming is challenging but never unbearable. With a strong base of regulars, it feels less like a drop-in workout than a place to become part of a community.

Practice Room (NoHo)

Practice Room (NoHo)

650 Broadway 4th Flr., New York
Mon-Thurs: 5:30am-10:30am, 3:30pm-8pm
Fri: 5:30am-10:30am, 3:30pm-6:30pm
Sat: 7:30am-3pm
Sun: 9am-4:30pm

Classes at Practice Room NYC blend hot sculpt, Pilates, yoga, and recovery. The original NoHo location (with a second outpost in Williamsburg) has two infrared-heated rooms set at 105 degrees, where the heat feels more like direct sunlight than traditional sauna heat. Instructors each bring their own energy and playlists; we recommend Lauren Schramm's hot sculpt classes (join the waitlist, they fill fast). While they don’t have traditional locker rooms, Practice Room does have complimentary showers, towels, and fully stocked beauty bars with Dyson hairdryers.

TERA

TERA

Private studio address provided upon booking

TERA Studio & Pilates Club in SoHo is a private, referral-based studio founded by Georgia Wood Murphy, known for its contemporary, strength-driven take on Pilates. The TERA Method™ blends traditional foundations with dynamic, athletic movement—classes are tough, controlled, and definitely not for beginners. The SoHo space is deliberately intimate, with a members-only feel that keeps classes small and tight-knit. If you can't make it in person, their Online Studio offers mat-based classes that follow the same method.

The LIV Method (Upper East Side)

The LIV Method (Upper East Side)

157 E. 86th St., 3rd Floor, New York
Mon-Sat: 6am-8pm
Sun: 9am-5pm

At The LIV Method, everything is built around the individual. Rather than booking a standard class, you share your goals and do an intro call to be matched with the right trainer. From there, it's fully tailored—a structured plan built around your goals, schedule, and lifestyle, whether you're doing personal training or small group sessions. They place equal emphasis on recovery, with a dedicated Rituals suite featuring an infrared sauna, steam room, and cold plunge. There's also a Midtown location (without the recovery suite) and an outpost in East Hampton.

PVOLVE

PVOLVE

415 W Broadway, 2S, New York
Look at class schedule

Built around strength, mobility, and stability, the Pvolve method focuses on functional movement patterns that help you move better—not just look sculpted. You’ve likely seen Jennifer Aniston promoting Pvolve on her Instagram—after experiencing the method firsthand, she joined as both an advisor and ambassador. What sets it apart is the approach. Classes use patented resistance equipment and controlled, low-impact movements to sculpt and tone without putting excess stress on the joints. It’s grounded in ongoing clinical research, which is evident in how intentional the programming feels.

SOTO Method (Upper East Side)

SOTO Method (Upper East Side)

206 E 86th St., New York
Mon: 7am-7pm
Tues-Thurs: 6am-7pm
Fri: 7am-2pm
Sat: 8am-2pm
Sun: 9am-2pm

SOTO Method, founded by Hilary Hoffman, offers high-intensity, low-impact workouts. After the success of the original Tribeca studio, they recently opened a second on the Upper East Side. Both studios offer two formats: SotoSweat, a higher-energy class with cardio intervals; and SotoSculpt, focused on strength and muscle definition. The method is designed to be repeated rather than constantly changed, letting you build strength and track progress—no overcomplicated choreography, just controlled, targeted movement.

The Pack

The Pack

49 W. 23rd St., New York
Mon-Fri: 6am-9pm
Sat-Sun: 7am-6pm

The Pack is built around a clear mission: preparing you for whatever life throws at you, physically and mentally. The 50-minute class is split into three parts—strength, striking, and endurance—to help you develop power, coordination, and stamina in the same session. Strength uses dumbbells, benches, and resistance bands with a focus on control and stability; the striking portion brings in boxing, kicks, and knees on B.O.B. dummies; and class concludes with endurance on Echo bikes. The idea is that preparation and consistent work leads to confidence and capability, far beyond the workout.

Broome Street Yoga

Broome Street Yoga

430 Broome St., Nolita
Mon-Fri: 7am-8pm
Sat-Sun: 8am-1pm

Broome Street Yoga is Gwyneth's go-to yoga studio whenever she's in New York City, offering what she describes as a "deep miracle" inside the body. It's located inside a Hindu temple in lower Manhattan, grounded in traditional practice, and dedicated to the ongoing study of yoga. Classes span multiple styles—from breath-focused sessions to those incorporating meditation, sound healing, or strength-based work—so there's something for every level and interest. Many classes are also available online, making it easy to stay connected whether you're in the city or not.

Lyons Den Power Yoga

Lyons Den Power Yoga

267 W 17th St., 2nd Floor, Tribeca
Permanently Closed

One of the best heated yoga studios in NYC, Lyons Den is known for its infrared-heated power vinyasa classes set to curated playlists. The flows are fast-paced and demanding, but instructors offer hands-on corrections and thoughtful modifications to help you move smoothly through class, regardless of experience level. Each class is rooted in their "Journey Into Power" sequence—a foundational Vinyasa flow that matches breath to movement—meant to build heat, strength, and mental clarity.

Sky Ting Yoga

Sky Ting Yoga

324 Lafayette St., 4th floor, New York
Mon-Fri: 7am-7pm
Sat: 8am-3pm
Sun: 8am-5pm

Perhaps the chicest yoga studio in NYC, Sky Ting was designed in part by Courtney Applebaum—who collaborated with Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen on The Row's Melrose Place store—and has an airy, effortlessly cool aesthetic. The foundation of their signature Sky Ting class is pulled from Vinyasa, Katonah, Iyengar, Kundalini, and Hatha yoga traditions—but each instructor brings their own perspective, so no two sessions feel the same. They also offer specialty classes including infrared-heated and candlelit sessions. The studio also has an on-site spa, featuring two infrared saunas, a cold plunge, and a relaxing lounge with three day beds.

SOUK Studio

SOUK Studio

12 W. 27th St., 2nd floor, Nomad
Mon: 9:30am-8:30pm
Tues: 8:15am-8pm
Wed: 9:30am-8:45pm
Thurs: 8:15am-7:30pm
Fri: 9:30am-7pm
Sat: 8:30am-5pm
Sun: 8:30am-5:30pm

SOUK Yoga Studio is a unique space that brings together movement, sound, and community. Classes are rooted in established yoga traditions like Jivamukti, Iyengar, and Ashtanga, alongside breathwork and sound meditation—and there’s a strong emphasis on how everything connects, from breath to movement to mental stillness. Each session is taught by experienced instructors, and suitable for all levels.

Chelsea Piers Fitness (Chelsea)

Chelsea Piers Fitness (Chelsea)

60 Chelsea Piers, New York
Mon-Fri: 5:30am-10pm
Sat-Sun: 8am-8pm

A longtime New York staple, the flagship Chelsea Piers Fitness location spans 150,000 square feet along Hudson River Park and feels more like a full athletic complex than a typical gym. Beyond the gym floor, there are sport-specific spaces—basketball and sand volleyball courts, an indoor track—plus a wide class lineup spanning Pilates, yoga, barre, cycling, boxing, and HIIT. There's also a serious aquatic and recovery component with a 6-lane, 75-foot saltwater pool, cold plunge tubs, an infrared sauna, and a hot tub—all with views of the Hudson. Whether you want to lift, take classes, train for a sport, or focus on recovery, it's all here. There's even a babysitting service for the little ones.

Equinox Hudson Yards Club

Equinox Hudson Yards Club

32 Hudson Yards, New York
Mon-Thurs: 5:30am-11pm
Fri: 5:30am-10pm
Sat-Sun: 7am-9pm

We love the Equinox locations throughout the city, but the brand's 60,000-square-foot flagship in Hudson Yards is something special: a complete training environment, not simply a place to work out. What sets it apart is the range of amenities: an indoor saltwater lap pool, hot and cold plunges, outdoor barrel saunas, and a year-round heated lounge pool on a terrace with 360-degree views of Manhattan and the Hudson. It's a destination rather than a local gym, and one worth making time for. Note: This location requires an additional membership fee.

Gotham Gym

Gotham Gym

600 Washington St., New York
Mon-Thurs: 6am-9pm
Fri: 6am-6pm
Sat: 8am-4pm
Sun: 8am-2pm

Gotham Gym in the West Village has a no-nonsense, results-first approach. Founded by Rob Piela, it earned its standing over the years as one of the city's most respected places to train. Boxing is the core of what they do, built out into a complete strength and conditioning program. Sessions are mostly one-on-one and tailored closely to the individual. People come to put in real work—and they return because it delivers.

CityView

CityView

43-34 32nd Pl., Long Island City
Mon-Fri: 6am-10pm
Sat-Sun: 8am-9pm

Set on the rooftop of a former factory in Long Island City, CityView Racquet Club is an all-in-one destination built around racket sports—and our favorite place to play tennis in NYC, thanks to genuinely bookable courts and expert coaching. It's the only club in New York City with tennis, padel, and squash—and facilities include five Har-Tru clay tennis courts, three padel courts, four squash courts, a gym, locker rooms, and a contrast therapy spa. A recent Brisas partnership resulted in a design refresh, expanding the club beyond sports with an all-day café, a member lounge, a co-working space, and areas for recovery. The coaching is exceptional and the programming is strong across all three sports.

Hudson River Park Tennis Courts

Hudson River Park Tennis Courts

92 Hudson River Greenway, New York

Positioned right along the Hudson, these courts have sweeping views of the Freedom Tower and the Lower Manhattan skyline. The three free hard courts are open daily from 6am to 1am on a first-come, first-served basis—no reservations or permits required—with play capped at an hour when others are waiting. On weekdays during the school year, courts may be reserved for permitted school use from 3:30 to 5:30pm.

Manhattan Plaza Racquet Club

Manhattan Plaza Racquet Club

450 W. 43rd St., New York
Mon-Fri: 5:30am-12am
Sat-Sun: 7am-12am

Tucked into Midtown, Manhattan Plaza Racquet Club is a small club with five hard courts under an insulated bubble, perfect for year-round play. Booking courts in NYC can be a challenge, but here it's far more manageable: Members are able to reserve up to two weeks ahead and the club offers organized match play that pairs you with players at your level. The coaching is strong, too, with experienced pros who are available to teach adults and juniors at all levels. It's straightforward, reliable, and refreshingly low-hassle.

Padel Haus (Williamsburg)

Padel Haus (Williamsburg)

307 Kent Ave., Brooklyn
Mon-Fri: 7am-11pm
Sat-Sun: 7am-10pm

Padel Haus has the best padel courts in Brooklyn, and the Williamsburg outpost is the original and flagship location. The club features four indoor, state-of-the-art courts, making it a reliable year-round place to play, regardless of weather. Beyond the courts, there's a fitness studio with Aviron rowing machines for high-intensity cardio conditioning. The spa-like locker rooms have rain showers and Malin + Goetz products, plus there's a juice bar and lounge spaces throughout. The programming includes clinics, tournaments, and coaching for all skill levels. Membership isn't required to play, but it grants priority booking and better rates.

Reserve Padel

Reserve Padel

360 10th Ave., New York
Mon-Sun: 6am-11pm

As Manhattan's first dedicated padel club, Reserve Padel Hudson Yards brings a refined, community-driven approach to one of the fastest-growing sports around. The club features three outdoor, glass-enclosed courts with elevated viewing areas, so even when you're not playing, you're part of the energy. Clinics, coaching, and open court time make it accessible for all levels, from first-timers to experienced players. It's also more than the courts: locker rooms, showers, a gym, and cold plunges make it a full workout and recovery destination. And, the members-only model keeps a consistent group of regulars coming back.

Roosevelt Island Racquet Club

Roosevelt Island Racquet Club

281 W Main St., Roosevelt Island
Mon-Sun: 7am-11:30pm

Roosevelt Island Racquet Club feels removed from the usual city chaos, creating a calmer, more focused environment to play tennis in NYC. The club features twelve clay courts and a comfortable clubhouse—a traditional setup that's less about design than well-maintained courts and consistent play—with a strong team running extensive adult and junior programming. Their match pairing service make it easy to get on court (since you don't have to coordinate schedules), and members can book up to two weeks in advance. Right next to the 59th Street tram, it's only minutes from Manhattan—just long enough for the ride to feel like you've left your day behind, without losing major time to the commute.

SPORTIME/JMTA, Randall’s Island

SPORTIME/JMTA, Randall’s Island

1 Randall’s Island, New York
Mon-Sun: 6am-11pm

John Macenroe Tennis Academy (JMTA) at SPORTIME on Randall's Island has one of the most comprehensive tennis facilities and academies in NYC. Spanning over 250,000 square feet, its scale alone sets it apart and makes it easy to get on-court year-round. The club features 29 tennis courts—a mix of Laykold hard and Har-Tru clay—plus padel courts and multiple indoor, climate-controlled structures. Beyond tennis, the setup is complete with training spaces, locker rooms, lounge areas, a pro shop with 24-hour stringing, and a café. As the home of the JMTA, its coaching and programming are exceptional, with a junior development track that's among the strongest in the city.

96th Street Clay Tennis Courts/Oscar Hijuelos Tennis Courts

96th Street Clay Tennis Courts/Oscar Hijuelos Tennis Courts

475 Riverside Dr., New York
Mon-Sun: 7am-8pm

Take 96th street all the way to the Hudson, and you’ll find Manhattan's only public, outdoor red-clay courts—complete with lovely views of the water. The clay surface is the real draw here—it slows the game down and shifts focus to technique and precision. Combined with the quiet setting in Riverside Park, it feels removed from the city, making it one of the more under-the-radar places to play. While technically public, it’s worth noting these courts are operated by the Riverside Clay Tennis Association, which offers priority reservations and programming for members. (If you're not a member, courts can be hard to book since member events often fill the schedule.)

FORWARD_Space

FORWARD_Space

24 Spring St., New York
Mon-Sun: 7am-8:30pm

FORWARD__Space promotes cardio and conditioning in their 50-minute classes that mix dance, athletic movement, and meditative flow. Founded by renowned dancer and choreographer Kristin Sudeikis, the intention of each class is all about feeling empowered through euphoric exercise and tuning into how you feel while moving your body. There’s no dance background required—the music drives everything, pulling you into the lively movement.

Joffrey Ballet

Joffrey Ballet

434 6th Ave., New York
Mon-Sat: 8am-8pm
Sun: Closed

Last summer, the prestigious Joffrey Ballet School started offering Open Classes: high-level dance training sessions without the commitment of a full program. These drop-in classes at their Manhattan studios span ballet, jazz, contemporary, and conditioning—open to all levels, from beginners to professionals. Taught by Joffrey faculty, the instruction emphasizes strength, alignment, and artistic expression, with the feel of a professional studio among an all-adult, artist-driven community. Check in on the third floor before class, and note that proper ballet shoes are required for ballet sessions.

The Formula X Meredith

The Formula X Meredith

308 E 86th St., New York
Mon: 6am-7:30 pm
Tues: 7:15am-12pm
Wed: 6am-7:30pm
Thurs: 7:15am-7:30pm
Fri: 6am-12pm
Sat: 8:15am- 12pm

After three years in the Hamptons, The Formula X Meredith recently opened on the Upper East Side—and it has a strong cult following. The 60-minute, low-impact, high-intensity workout is set to music and built around repetition and precision. Each class has a joyous energy and delivers results through intentional, efficient movement.

The Class

The Class

22 Park Pl., 3rd Floor, New York
Mon: 7am-8:30pm
Tues: 7am-8pm
Wed: 7am-7pm
Thurs: 7am-8pm
Fri: 7am-7pm
Sat: 9am-4pm
Sun: 8:30am-7:30pm

The Class by Taryn Toomey is a music-driven, somatic workout designed to regulate the nervous system and release pent-up energy. Sessions move through a grounding warm-up, repetitive sequences, breathwork, and a vocal release—yelling, shaking, letting go—before concluding with a calming reset. It’s equal parts physical workout and emotional catharsis. Come with an open mind; you'll leave feeling noticeably lighter mentally.

The Beekman, A Thompson Hotel

The Beekman, A Thompson Hotel

123 Nassau St., Financial District

New hot spots seem to open in Lower Manhattan every week, and the Beekman (a block from City Hall and a few minutes’ walk from Battery Park) was one of the biggest. Designed by Martin Brudnizki—whose latest work includes London’s exclusive club Annabel’s and restaurant the Ivy—the redbrick building dates back to the 1880s. It feels like something from a British period film—with rugs over terra-cotta-tiled floors, tasseled velvet club chairs, wrought-iron balustrades, and dark, wood-paneled walls. Le Gratin, the hotel’s restaurant, is by Daniel Boulud and is a destination in its own right, serving classic, expertly made Lyonnais dishes.

Gild Hall, A Thompson by Hyatt

Gild Hall, A Thompson by Hyatt

15 Gold St., Financial District

This Thompson Street hotel has a lot more personality than you’ll generally otherwise find in the Financial District, as it’s funnily-enough, inspired by an Aspen country house (and more specifically, it's designed by Jim Walrod). The lobby feels a bit like a ski lodge, there’s really good art on the walls, and the beds are topped with tartan blankets. Though its location is a little out of the way if you’re not planning on spending a majority of your time downtown, it’s not that deep into the Financial District and its rates are good for the quality.

The Greenwich Hotel

The Greenwich Hotel

377 Greenwich St., Tribeca

The hotel offers a wonderfully secluded and private stay, while the on-site restaurant, Locanda Verde, is one of our favorite Tribeca haunts. Subtly Mediterranean in vibe, the simply decorated rooms here are cozy and airy, plus there's an incredible Shibui spa, a pool and steam room, and a pretty courtyard that's the perfect destination when you just want coffee and the morning paper. The real crown jewel though, is the Penthouse Suite. Axel Vervoodt spent two years renovating it, and the end result is absolutely stunning: In his signature way, there's stone and wood accents, rough-luxe textured walls, wooden floors, and chic simplicity throughout.

Adrienne's Pizzabar

Adrienne's Pizzabar

54 Stone St., Financial District
Sun–Mon: 11:30am–10pm
Tues–Wed: 11:30am–11pm
Thurs–Sat: 11:30am–12am

If you've ever had a meal South of Canal Street, chances are that Peter Poulakakos was involved. He owns the popular Harry's Bar & Restaurant, and also this quietly delicious pizzeria, which has been around for years. The pies are straightforward in execution (i.e., wood-fired), generously sized and topped, and reliably great. There's also an ample array of salads and antipasto on the menu, as well as Italian classics like eggplant parm. On warmer nights you can sit out on the cobblestone street.

American Cut

American Cut

363 Greenwich St., Tribeca
Mon–Thurs: 5pm–9pm
Friday–Saturday: 5pm-10pm

This dressed-up restaurant has all the elements of an old-school Mad Men-style steakhouse: Oysters, tick; an excellent Caesar Salad, tick; crabcakes and shrimp cocktails, tick. And of course, if it's steak you’re after, this is one of the best places in town to get it, with all the classic options for dressing it up, from Bearnaise sauce to an egg on top. The private space is moodily-lit.

Atera

Atera

77 Worth St., Tribeca
Mon: 7pm–10pm
Tues–Fri: 5pm–10pm
Sat: 1:30pm–10pm
Sun: 5pm–10pm

This sleek (and tiny) foodie destination in Tribeca has only 18 seats, meaning that reservations are hard to come by. If you manage to snag one, you're in for a pretty great experience. The modern multi-course prix fixe menu (expect ingredients like birch sap or moss) is served opposite an open kitchen, which is fascinating to watch.

Azabu

Azabu

428 Greenwich St., Tribeca

When the beloved owner behind Mercer Street’s Honmura An moved back to Japan, and closed his restaurant in Soho, many a foodie’s heart was broken. But the Japanese food at Azabu might be just as exquisite. The restaurant specializes in small places and sushi, including delicious uni handrolls and spicy tuna maki.

Frenchette

Frenchette

241 W. Broadway, Tribeca
Mon–Fri: 12pm–10pm
Sat: 11am–10pm
Sun: 11am–9pm

Balthazar and Minetta Tavern alums Riad Nasr and Lee Hanson got together and decided to do a French brasserie. Get the brouillade (buttery, garlicky scrambled egg and escargot)—technically it’s an hors d’oeuvre, but who cares? This could easily stand in as an entrée (especially with a side of charred carrots with labneh). And while ordering roast chicken might seem like a cop-out from some of the less pronounceable items on the menu, Frenchette’s is perfectly roasted and presented on a bed of croutons that soak up all the drippings, along with a little pot of puréed potatoes. The biodynamic wine list is a departure from the usual for French spots—and a very welcome one.

Il Brigante

Il Brigante

214 Front St., Financial District
Mon–Thurs: 12pm–10:30pm
Fri: 12pm–11pm
Sat: 12:30pm–11pm
Sun: 12:30pm–10:30pm

Both popular and low-key, this Southern Italian spot offers the sort of classics—gnocchi, carbonara, baked branzino, plenty of pizzas—that you always want, along with some regional specialties from Calabria and Sila that make it a little exciting, too.

Kiki's

Kiki's

130 Division St., Chinatown
Sun–Mon: 12pm–11pm
Tues–Sat: 12pm–12am

Despite the Chinese characters on the awning outside, stepping through the olive green French doors at Kiki's on tiny Division Street, near the border of Chinatown and LES, sort of feels like you're walking into a taverna in Greece. The vibe is part local, part cool, all fun; and the food—from grilled octopus to Greek salad, tzatziki, and Melitzanosalata (eggplant mash)—is simply done and very good.

La Mercerie

La Mercerie

53 Howard St., Tribeca
Mon–Fri: 11:30am–10pm
Sat–Sun: 10am–3pm, 5pm–10pm

Interior design firm Roman and Williams’s expansive retail space in SoHo, Guild, is home to three things: a furniture and homeware showroom, an art gallery, and La Mercerie, chef Marie Aude-Rose’s picture-perfect French café and the real reason to come here. Aude-Rose excels at creating food you want to take time savoring, and the egg dishes are especially wonderful—highlights include a soft-boiled egg with cauliflower and tofu cream and an expertly made cheese omelet. The crème brûlée puts all other crème brûlées over the world to shame.

Le District

Le District

Brookfield Place, 225 Liberty St., Financial District

This 30,000 square-foot French-style food hall offers a bustling market divided into different “districts" (from a café and an ice cream shop to an ample salad-and-prepared-food spot), as well as multiple restaurants. There’s Le Bar, which as its name suggests is best for a glass of wine and shared plates, and then the gigantic Liberty Bistro, with standard bistro fare and a view of the water.

Locanda Verde

Locanda Verde

377 Greenwich St., Tribeca
Mon–Fri: 7am–11am, 11:30am–3pm, 5pm–11pm
Sat–Sun: 7am–3pm, 5pm–11pm

The best seat here is actually in the courtyard—shielded by palms, you feel truly removed from the city. The Italian food is hearty, comforting, and reliably great whether you come for breakfast or a big dinner with friends. Their private dining room is surprisingly spacious (it can hold up to 60 seated guests), but a warm stone fireplace keeps things cozy.

Forgione

Forgione

30 Hudson St., Tribeca
Mon–Thu: 5pm–9:30pm
Fri–Sat: 5pm–10pm

The candlelit room filled with wooden farmhouse tables and exposed bricks is the perfect setting for Iron Chef winner Marc Forgione's delicious comfort food, from filet mignon to blackened chicken.

MarkJoseph Steakhouse

MarkJoseph Steakhouse

261 Water St., Financial District
Mon–Fri: 12pm–9:30pm
Sat: 5pm–10pm

Tucked away at the northern end of the Seaport, this old-school steakhouse is one of Manhattan’s main rivals for Brooklyn’s Peter Luger, which is just across the bridge. (Plus, MarkJoseph takes credit cards.) If you don’t love or eat meat it still has its appeal: Namely there's creamed spinach, wedge salad, perfectly whipped potatoes, and asparagus.

Max

Max

134 W. Broadway, Tribeca
Sun–Thurs: 5pm–9:30pm
Fri–Sat: 5pm–10pm

This small and cozy offshoot from the East Village original is exactly where you want to go when you want to dive into a hearty plate of no-fuss pasta. They don’t skimp on portions, nor do they skimp on wine pours, and it’s all really well-priced.

Mr Chow

Mr Chow

121 Hudson St., Tribeca

Michael Chow made his name in the London and Hollywood art and music worlds before opening in New York on East 57th Street in 1979, where his restaurant quickly became one of the city’s main touchstones for the art world. Andy Warhol, Keith Haring, David Bowie, Madonna, and John Lennon were just a few of the restaurant’s faithful patrons (watch Julian Schnabel’s Basquiat to get a sense of the scene). To this day, a meal at Mr Chow's isn't about the food: It's about the tuxedo and white glove service and the fun, party vibe. The outpost in Tribeca is just as beautiful and scene-y—an Andy Warhol portrait of Chow in the dining room sets the tone.

Takahachi

Takahachi

145 Duane St., Tribeca
Tues–Fri: 12pm–2:30pm, 5pm–10pm
Sat–Mon: 5pm–10pm

Quiet and unassuming, this long-standing institution has one of the friendlier sushi chef staffs in downtown—there’s also plenty of bar seating. While there’s always something interesting on the daily sushi menu, we think they really shine when it comes to the cooked dishes and soba noodle salads. There’s also an outpost in Brooklyn and a bakery down the street.

The Dead Rabbit Grocery & Grog

The Dead Rabbit Grocery & Grog

30 Water St., Financial District
Sun–Thurs: 11am–2am
Fri–Sat: 11am–3am

This award-winning bar is incredibly well-executed to feel like a 19th-century Irish pub that’s been subtly turned on its head. (For one, the mixologists are some of the world’s best.) On the ground-floor, you’ll find a classic, though impeccably-designed taproom with bottled punch, whiskeys, and craft beers (along with a hearty menu of sandwiches and pies); Upstairs, it gets a little bit fancier as they make historically accurate cocktails from the 19th-century in a lounge-like room. The food menu upstairs is actually the same, with offerings like sausage rolls, oysters, and burgers.

Grand Banks

Grand Banks

Pier 25, Hudson River Park, Tribeca
Mon–Fri: 11am–12am
Sat–Sun: 9am–12am

From June through October, this oyster bar aboard the historic Sherman Zwicker schooner docks at Pier 25 in Tribeca. Under yellow and white stripe canopies, servers in appropriately nautical outfits distribute casual sea-side fare and cocktails from the built-in bar. During weekend days, it’s a fun lobster roll destination with kids, and in the evenings, thanks to a solid list of schooner-themed cocktails and oysters and small plates, it’s a pretty great night out. While the location is a bit remote, it’s still conveniently close to downtown—plus, how cool is it to eat on the water?

The Hideaway Seaport

The Hideaway Seaport

22 Peck Slip, 151 Water St., Financial District
Mon–Fri: 5pm–12am
Sat–Sun: 12pm–1am

At first glance, this looks like a laid-back bar with a good cocktail list; but the major appeal, here, is that on Sundays, they bring in Maryland Blue Crabs. These are served alongside nicer bar food than you'd expect, like truffle fries and a homemade burger.

Puffy's Tavern

Puffy's Tavern

81 Hudson St., Tribeca
Mon: 11:30am–1am
Tues–Thurs: 11:30am–2am
Fri: 11:30am–3am
Sat: 12pm–3am
Sun: 12pm–8pm

This long, dark bar on a lonesome corner in Tribeca is handsome, yet non-descript, which is what you want when the sole intent of the night is to grab some drinks with friends. You can generally always get a small table or seat at the bar, and there are darts in the back. This isn't fancy (no craft cocktails in sight), so swing by when you want something basic or a beer.

Smith & Mills

Smith & Mills

71 N. Moore St., Tribeca
Sun–Mon: 4pm–11pm
Tues–Sat: 4pm–1am

This cool little hole-in-the-wall bar in Tribeca is delightful for a quick, quiet drink (or two), and a delicious seafood dinner if you can nab a seat. There are oysters and clams on the menu, as well as an excellent brioche bun burger.

Terroir

Terroir

24 Harrison St., Tribeca
Mon: 4pm–10pm
Tues–Wed: 4pm–11pm
Thurs–Sat: 4pm–12am
Sun: 4pm–9pm

Terroir is the kind of bar where even wine connoisseurs might learn something new. And on the flip side, if you've always found wine intimidating, the incredibly knowledgeable staff are more than happy to make recommendations and teach you everything they know. Their wine menu is vast, as as is the meat-heavy small bites menu.

Walker's

Walker's

16 N. Moore St., Tribeca
Mon–Fri: 12pm–3am
Sat–Sun: 11am–3am

This is one of Tribeca’s most history-laden taverns, with the pressed tin ceilings and sagging floors to prove it. The menu is a bit random—hummus, cowboy chili, chicken tenders—but most people really come for a cocktail and a seat at the wonderfully worn-in bar.

Weather Up

Weather Up

159 Duane St., Tribeca
Mon: 5pm–11pm
Tues–Wed: 5pm–12am
Thurs: 5pm–1am
Fri–Sat: 5pm–2am

This is the second outpost of the Prospect Heights bar, loved for its great music and relaxed vibe.

Black Seed Bagels

Black Seed Bagels

170 Elizabeth St., Nolita

The hand-rolled, wood-fired bagel sandwiches at Black Seed are actually easy to eat (they’re much smaller than their brethren), and for the most part, they’re great—particularly for those times when the only thing that will satisfy is a bagel sandwich. Favorites include: beet-cured gravlax, a basic tuna salad, Tobiko spread, and the egg salad (though it’s heavy on the dill). There’s now a location in the Financial District and East Village, in addition to the Nolita original.

Chambers Street Wines

Chambers Street Wines

79 Chambers St., Tribeca

On a good day, Chambers Street Wines has around 2,000 bottles wedged onto its many shelves and crates, and all of them are available for delivery. In a city packed with excellent wine purveyors, Chambers Street stands out for its dedication to organic, small-production wines and unusual champagnes (yes, there’s a whole world of champagne out there beyond the five or six labels we’re so accustomed to paying top dollar for). Chambers has compiled a slew of what it calls “sampler cases” of wine running the gamut: pét-nat (naturally sparkling), skin-contact (orange wine), red, white, and natural (biodynamic). You can try a case of six or twelve wines of the same type but from different regions and producers to note the variations and nuances of terroir.

Dos Toros Taqueria

Dos Toros Taqueria

Brookfield Place, 225 Liberty St., Financial District

Co-owned by two brothers from San Francisco—who were dismayed by the dearth of good Mexican spots in NYC—the emphasis here is on the basics: Tacos, burritos, quesadillas, and burrito bowls. The ingredients are fresh and local, and the flavorings are equal parts subdued and complex. This spot is popular: There's practically one in every neighborhood.

Kaffe Landskap

Kaffe Landskap

401 Greenwich St., Tribeca
Mon–Fri: 6:30am–6pm
Sat–Sun: 7am–4pm

If you're meeting friends here keep in mind that there are actually two Kaffe Landskap's in Tribeca, just a handful of blocks from each other on the north and south ends of the neighborhood. If they're looking to own an area, they've certainly done it, as it's the best spot south of Canal for an almond milk latte (or fresh juice).

Laughing Man

Laughing Man

184 Duane St., Tribeca

Years ago, Hugh Jackman and his wife, Deborah-Lee Furness traveled to Ethiopia and met a coffee farmer named Dukale, who was growing incredible beans in an effort to support his family. In 2011, Jackman started the Laughing Man Foundation, to help farmers find a market for their beans in America, which you can sample at his Tribeca coffee shop. Not only do 100% of the profits support the foundation, but they make an excellent Flat White, too.

Olive's

Olive's

Brookfield Place, 225 Liberty St., Financial District
Mon–Sat: 7am–7pm
Sun: 9am–6pm

The sandwiches, soups, and salads here are mighty: While the offerings change daily, you can always count on a pretty delicious (and hearty) turkey sandwich, or a chopped salad packed with everything you could ever want. There's also a location in Soho.

Pasanella & Son

Pasanella & Son

115 South St., South Street Seaport

At first glance, you’ll notice the tiny European car parked in the middle of this little shop in the old-world-like Pasanella & Sons. But you’ll really be sold by the 400-odd wines on offer, from better-known vineyards to little known European labels—there’s also a great array of accessories, like gorgeous crystal and antique corkscrews. Beyond selling bottles, they do fun area events, like tastings in the garden out back and sunset drinks on the deck of the schooner Pioneer, parked in the Seaport nearby.

The Tin Building by Jean-Georges

The Tin Building by Jean-Georges

96 South St., Seaport
Sun-Thurs: 8am-10pm
Fri-Sat: 8am-10:30pm

With an endless array of choices—all delicious, and made with environmentally friendly, non-GMO, and organic produce where possible—Tin Building is the hot spot for just about everything: a gourmet market, music, and events. And it's perfect for satisfying a group of picky visitors. Start your morning off with a saffron golden milk from T Cafe and a brunch burger from Double Yolk. For lunch, you can’t go wrong with the California dates and little gem lettuce dressed with creamy sesame peppercorn and kosho marinated cucumbers from Seeds + Weeds.

Zucker's

Zucker's

143 Chambers St., Tribeca

Come here for classic, hand-rolled, kettle-boiled bagels: And all the relevant toppings, from super-thick cream cheese variations, to smoked lox, to a pretty great egg salad (and an egg sandwich, for mornings when nothing else will do). There’s room to sit quickly, though most people don’t linger (although they do serve La Colombe coffee). It’s also a great option for catering.

Annex Giancarlo Valle

Annex Giancarlo Valle

50 Lispenard St., Tribeca
Mon: By appointment
Tues–Fri: 10am–6pm
Sat: 12pm–6pm

Studio Giancarlo Valle outfitted Hotel Esencia, Soho Townhouse, and some of Manhattan’s coolest lofts. This is their showroom, where you can check out their signature furniture IRL: carved-cedar credenzas, sinuate sconces, and geometric seating that doesn’t sacrifice on plushness.

Bode Women's

Bode Women's

79 Worth St., Tribeca

Bode admirers waited seven years for designer Emily Adams Bode Aujla to introduce a women’s line, and it’s every bit as good as people hoped for, with thrift-inspired jackets, gauzy dresses, and playful accessories (like a handbag shaped like a fish, and a belt studded with multicolor rhinestones). This location is dedicated to Bode womenswear; you’ll find their iconic menswear, shoes, and one-of-a-kind pieces in separate spaces on the Lower East Side.

Bowne & Co. Stationers

Bowne & Co. Stationers

211 Water St., Financial District

Officially part of the South Street Seaport Museum, this is a wonderful, old-world print shop, which actually holds the title of being New York City’s oldest operating business under the same name (Robert Bowne started it in 1775). The 19th-century letter presses are still on-site, and you can buy cards that are still made in the shop today.

Colony

Colony

196 W. Broadway, Tribeca

At this design co-operative, designers like Flat Vernacular, Fort Standard, and Meg Callahan co-exist in beautiful vignettes scattered throughout the space. It’s founder Jean Lin who has a special knack for the whole mix, giving high-design furniture, textiles, and accessories a home-like context.

Cos Bar

Cos Bar

250 Vesey St., Financial District

The only thing better than Cos Bar's famously vast offering of makeup, fragrance, bath, and beauty products is the exceptional customer service provided by the knowledgeable, genuinely nice beauty consultants, which is exactly how founder Lily Garfield envisioned it back in 1976 when she opened the original Aspen outpost.

deVOL Kitchens

deVOL Kitchens

28 Bond St., Noho
Mon-Fri: 9am-5:30pm
Sat: 10am-5pm

The broad cobblestone streets between Bowery and Lafayette are a fitting entryway to the charm of deVOL. Founded in 1989 by two design graduates from Loughborough University, the English countryside–charactered kitchen interiors duo expanded across the pond back in 2019. This showroom boasts four awe-inspiring kitchen setups filled with dreamy cabinets adorned with handcrafted hardware and fixtures, Italian marble sinks, and an intoxicating scent of wild fig and grape. Almost all items are handmade in their Leicestershire workshops. If you can manage to pull yourself away from the dreamy kitchens, the basement is a wonderland of perfectly curated vintage furniture, antiques, and brocante.

Double Knot

Double Knot

13 White St., Tribeca
Mon-Fri: 10am-5pm
Sat: 12pm-5pm

Double Knot boasts a collection of tribal rugs, antique carpets, kilims, and other textiles from a diverse array of regions: Turkey, Iran, the Caucasus, Central Asia, and Morocco. If in town, you can check out their gallery in Tribeca, which is open to the public.

Korin

Korin

57 Warren St., Financial District
Mon–Thurs: 10am–6pm
Sat: 10am–6pm

This Japanese shop equips restaurants like Nobu and Per Se, meaning it's where pro-chefs go to buy their knives. They're artfully displayed on the wall and in cases throughout the space according to brand and style. In addition, we like to shop their selection of lacquered bento boxes and traditional serveware.

La Garçonne

La Garçonne

465 Greenwich St., Tribeca
Tues–Sat: 11am–7pm
Sun: 12pm–6pm

At La Garçonne, founder Kris Kim curates for the design-minded minimalist—always elegant, never boring. Here, you’ll discover soft longline coats (and matching trousers) from Loulou Studio, bubble-shaped rattan bags from Sacai, glittery ballet flats from Dries Van Noten, and much more.

PPOW Gallery

PPOW Gallery

392 Broadway, Tribeca

Gallerists Penny Pilkington and Wendy Olsoff have been ahead of their time since they opened PPOW in the early ’80s, and they’ve stood by artists who otherwise might not have gotten their shot: Betty Tompkins, Martin Wong, David Wojnarowicz, Nancy Spero, and Carrie Mae Weems all showed here early in their careers. The gallery remains forward-thinking, hosting visionary artists whose work interrogates gender, race, sexuality, and inequality.

Quarters

Quarters

383 Broadway, Floor 2, Tribeca

Technically, Quarters is a gallery space for Brooklyn-based lighting studio In Common With. They host installations—of their own work, and that of visiting artists. But it feels nothing like a gallery, and more like visiting extremely chic friends in their extremely chic apartment. Grab a drink at the bar, then wander through immaculately designed bedrooms, lush living spaces, and a dream of a kitchen. If you fall in love with that lamp, or that table, or that painting on the wall, go ahead and mention it to one of the associates: Everything in the space is for sale.

Heyday

Heyday

92 Reade St., Tribeca
Mon–Thurs: 12pm–8pm
Fri–Sun: 9am–9pm

For exceptional skincare at an accessible price point, head to this facial spa (there are six locations in Manhattan). With a membership option, flexible scheduling, and a staff of New York State-accredited and licensed estheticians on hand, Heyday manages to make it easier and, most importantly, more convenient than many luxury facial spas to stop in for a last-minute tune-up.

The Lotus Method

The Lotus Method

50 Hudson St., Tribeca
Mon-Thurs: 7am-7pm
Fri: 7am-4pm
Sat: 7am-2pm

This intimate, humble spot bestows all the support and expertise you need for a safe and empowering workout during pregnancy or postpartum. Using body weight, functional movements, and some resistance equipment, your private sessions are guided by pre- and postnatal fitness experts that pay special attention to your unique needs during this time: incontinence, pelvic floor strength, general aches and pains, and even emotional support. Though it’s a three-month course, just one class will leave you feeling totally strong and revitalized.

QC NY Spa

QC NY Spa

Governors Island, 112 Andes Rd., Lower Manhattan
Sun-Thurs: 9:30am-10pm
Fri-Sat: 9:30am-11pm

The concept here is similar to a Korean spa, with one entrance fee covering multiple tubs, baths, steams, and treatments. The execution is more Italian in style. And it’s a ferry ride (included in your fee) away on Governors Island. There are outdoor pools, epic massages, beautiful steams and saunas, and even food and cocktails, all from an Italian spa brand with locations around the world. Go with friends, family, or your SO—an incredibly memorable way to spend a day (or half of one).

Raquel New York

Raquel New York

86 Walker St., Floor 6, Tribeca

Hidden on the top floor of a charming building in Tribeca (the elevator opens directly into an airy, high-ceilinged, all-white oasis), this sleek studio is where Raquel Medina-Cleghorn’s roster of famous clients go for sculpting, high-tech, skin-reviving facials and body treatments. Medina-Cleghorn employs ultrasound, intra oral massage, microchanneling, LED photobiomodulation, and more to bring skin to life. She herself is a calming presence, and when you walk out of a session, the difference in your skin is noticeable.

Ricari Studios

Ricari Studios

161 Water St., Floor 23, Manhattan
Mon-Sun: 9am-9pm

Ricari Studios is where the New York fashion set goes for lymphatic drainage—it’s known for having one of the most effective treatments in the city for reducing bloating, sculpting, and resetting your system. Treatments use specialized Italian Icoone technology to stimulate lymphatic flow, reduce inflammation, and improve circulation—which is especially great post-travel or post-event.

Shibui Spa

Shibui Spa

377 Greenwich St., Tribeca

It’s always an effort to sit up after a massage, but it’s nearly impossible to wrench yourself off the table after one of the transporting treatments at the onsen-modeled oasis that is The Greenwich Hotel’s Shibui Spa in Tribeca. The Japanese aesthetic—lanterns softly illuminate the heated pool in the main lounge area and embellish the treatment rooms, low-slung day beds, guests padding around in the best-looking Japanese Yukata robes—sets a tranquil, removed mood that’s instantly anxiety-dissolving. Prepare to be smoothed down in replenishing botanical oils that leave your skin a thousand times glowier than you’ve ever seen it. During the Drunken Lotus massage, essential oils are worked over every inch of your body, then tired muscles are stoked back to life as they’re enveloped in hot, sake-soaked towels. The seasonal aromatherapy bath soaks are over-the-top and can be added on to any treatment—think you (or you plus your better half, if you opt for the couples soak), in a tub, steeping in healing ginger-infused waters.

Tenoverten

Tenoverten

121 Fulton St., 2nd Floor, Financial District

This is not your regular neighborhood mani/pedi joint. Set up above the bustle of the Financial District, the low-key space is outfitted with mid-century modern antiques (you won't find any oversized massage chairs) and the technicians are incredibly well-trained.

Tulura

Tulura

65 Reade St., Tribeca

Models flock to the Tribeca studio of facialist Eileen Feighny della Faille, who’s made a name for herself with skin-clearing, Korean-style facials. A session with Feighny della Faille lasts a full two hours and involves a detoxifying, grounding, pampering, skin-rehabbing sequence of extractions, aromatherapy, radiofrequency, ice therapy, customized herbal masks, LED light, and more. If you can’t get in to see her—she’s often has a wait list—follow her best skin tip: Give yourself a face massage as often as you can. “Face massage is so important,” she says. “Massage your products in at every step in your routine, for lymphatic drainage, stimulating skin, and giving that energized, healthy glow.”

Imagination Playground

Imagination Playground

2 Fulton St., Financial District

Imagination Playground, designed by David Rockwell, is one of the city's most deluxe parks for little ones, with an enormous sand-pit, Rockwell's own system of big blue blocks for kids, and plenty of water and sprinklers. It goes without saying, but you'll want to pack a change of clothes since they can't resist getting wet.

Nelson A. Rockefeller Park

Nelson A. Rockefeller Park

75 Battery Pl., Tribeca

Located in the northern-most area of Battery Park City with direct views of the Hudson, this is one of the best parks in the city, with several play structures for different age groups, a water area, and a sand pit. Kids can also climb and interact with the playful Tom Otterness sculptures installed throughout the park.

South Street Seaport Museum

South Street Seaport Museum

12 Fulton St., Financial District

Granted, this stretch is as touristy as it gets, but it’s a great day’s outing with kids. Skip the shops, and head to the South Street Seaport Museum, where you get to climb aboard several historic ships, including the Pioneer, an authentic 19th-century schooner which hosts rides from May through October. (Don't miss Bowne & Co., an old-world print shop, which is attached to the South Street Seaport Museum.)

Central Park

Central Park

59th to 110th Street, between Fifth Avenue and Central Park West, Manhattan
Mon-Sun: 6am-1am

It would be impossible not to include Central Park—New York's most coveted green space and, in many ways, what the rest of the city orbits around. Stretching 2.5 miles from 59th to 110th Street, it offers a mix of open lawns, wooded paths, water, and formal gardens. See the iconic landmarks at least once: the cinematic Bethesda Terrace and fountain, Belvedere Castle, and The Lake—which is most memorably experienced by rowboat (rentable onsite). Seasonal moments make it worth returning to, from ice skating at Wollman Rink to Shakespeare in the Park at the newly renovated Delacorte Theater. But the real appeal is in the in-between: long walks around the Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis Reservoir with its uninterrupted skyline views, quieter shaded paths that feel removed from the city, and the simple act of finding a bench or patch of grass to sit with a coffee. For kids, the Central Park Zoo, the petting-friendly Tisch Children's Zoo, and numerous playgrounds make for an enjoyable afternoon outdoors.

The High Line

The High Line

828 Washington St., New York
Mon-Sun: 7am-10pm

The High Line is a public park built on a former elevated freight rail line along Manhattan's west side, running from the Meatpacking District through Chelsea to Hudson Yards. It's a linear path with planted gardens, seating areas, and framed views of the city and the Hudson River. What makes it special is the design: The original rail tracks are woven into the landscaping, and the plantings shift with the seasons. Rather than escaping the city, you move through it from a different vantage point, catching glimpses of streets and buildings you'd never notice from the ground. We recommend it for a walk with a friend when you want to get your steps in, but be warned—it's almost always crowded.

Haven's Kitchen

Haven's Kitchen

109 W. 17th St., Chelsea
Permanently Closed

We’re pretty smitten with the concept here: Founder Alison Cayne transformed a carriage house into a cooking school/supper club, where area chefs lead classes on everything from cooking Vietnamese food with fresh herbs to gluten and allergen-free baking. Once the meal is made, participants grab chairs and eat the spoils together.

Chelsea Piers

Chelsea Piers

23rd St. and Hudson River Park, Chelsea

Situated on a pier along the Hudson River, this gigantic sporting complex operates out of the "if you build it, they will come" mindset. And it’s true: Here, you’ll find year-round ice skating, a rock climbing wall, gymnastics, soccer, a driving range, and more, all situated under one sprawling roof.

Citi Bike

Citi Bike

There are now thousands of Citi Bikes in NYC, accessible via 500 ports spread out over every neighborhood. In short, you buy a 24-hour ($10) week-long ($25), or annual pass ($149), and then can pick up and drop off as many bikes as you need to get around the city. While there are plenty of designated bike lanes, ride with caution, as cab traffic moves fast!

Cook Space Brooklyn

Cook Space Brooklyn

603 Bergen St., Prospect Heights
Permanently Closed

New York City—a metropolis obsessed with eating—isn't short on restaurants, but Cook Space offers a totally novel, modern alternative to the classic dinner out. This multifunctional space in Brooklyn's Prospect Heights hosts cooking classes, catering opportunities, workshops, and even classes for kiddos. Whether you're an accomplished home cook or a newbie in the kitchen, the roster has a little bit of something for everyone: paleo, Ayurvedic, and Whole 30 classes, alongside New Orleans cuisine, classic Thai, or even vegan for carnivores—the list goes on. The best part? The lesson ends with a meal in the loftlike dining room.

abc kitchen

abc kitchen

35 E. 18th St., Union Square
Mon–Wed: 12pm–4:30pm, 5pm–10pm
Thurs–Fri: 12pm–4:30pm, 5pm–11pm
Sat: 11am–3pm, 5pm–11pm
Sun: 11am–3pm, 5pm–10pm

Helmed by chef Jean-Georges Vongerichten, this airy, all-white space is a temple to inventive, seasonal, and local cooking, sourced from nearby farms and cooperatives. It doesn't come as much of a shock that the fare is GMO-free and also made without pesticides, synthetic fertilizers, insecticides, antibiotics, or hormones. It's not surprising because you can taste the well-sourced provenance on the plate, whether in the form of house-made ricotta ravioli or fried organic chicken in a hot sauce butter.

Little Park

Little Park

85 W. Broadway, Tribeca
Permanently Closed

Little Park is actually huge. It has banquet and bistro tables, plush booths, and it occupies an entire corner in Tribeca (right below The Smyth hotel). For late-night revelers, the adjoining Evening Bar is a cozy spot to sip on mixologist Anne Robinson’s inventive cocktails. To craft the most seasonally sound menu possible, Chef Andrew Carmellini tapped local farmers, foragers, and ranchers for organic produce, grass-fed meats, and heirloom grains. Come here for traditional breakfast fare as well as lunch and dinner.

Jams

Jams

1414 6th Ave., Midtown
Mon–Fri: 7am–11:15am, 12pm–10pm
Sat–Sun: 7am–3pm, 3:30pm–10pm

Chef Jonathan Waxman was one of Alice Waters' protégés, and after stints at Chez Panisse and Michael's in Santa Monica, he was one of the first to bring that hyper-fresh, California-style cooking to New York. His new restaurant at 1 Hotel Central Park resurrects the name of his first-ever New York operation, and brings that same seasonal cuisine to a spacious corner space with simple, Scandinavian-style design. Because it’s connected to the hotel, there are several private rooms available for events and celebrations as well. Obviously, get the chicken.

by CHLOE.

by CHLOE.

185 Bleecker St., Greenwich Village
Permanently Closed

Chloe Coscarelli was fresh out of culinary school when she won an episode of Cupcake Wars with a vegan cupcake recipe: She was the first person to do so on that show or any other televised cooking competition. She’s since opened a casual restaurant in the West Village (followed by others), with an adorable interior (striped wooden floors, colorful tiles, hanging swing) and a little fridge with pre-packaged food. While the menu is focused on smoothies, juices, and great vegan burgers, you can still pick up her famous cupcakes.

The Little Beet

The Little Beet

2 Penn Plaza, Midtown
Permanently Closed

Ask someone with a gluten allergy about the Little Beet, and you're bound to get an earful of praise—the entire, delicious menu is celiac-friendly. Chef Franklin Becker was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes when he was in his 20's and devoted the rest of his career to rebuilding his cooking style; the menu is full of light, healthy meals with an emphasis on lean protein and tons of vegetables. The seasonal menu items are always a sure bet, as are the make-your-own-plate options. There are two other locations, on 50th and Park Ave.

Morgenstern's

Morgenstern's

88 W. Houston St., Greenwich Village

This ice cream place is run by Nicholas Morgenstern, a classically trained pastry chef (he was formerly head pastry chef at Gramercy Tavern) who turned out to be a whiz at crafting elevated flavors. Using only the highest quality ingredients, if you're craving a creamy and non-processed—treat, this is the spot. Beyond the scoops, the shop is incredibly charming: The exterior is painted royal blue and the inside is set up like an old-fashioned parlor with counter seats and a window ledge.

Souen

Souen

210 6th Ave., Soho
Permanently Closed

A New York mainstay since the '70s, the prevailing theory at Soeun is an old-school Japanese-based macrobiotic one: there is no meat, dairy, or eggs on the menu and certain veggies are prohibited. One could argue that the cult of the macro plate began here, but there are plenty of other dark green veggies, grains, beans and fish on the menu to leave you feeling pleasantly sated. Salmon or black cod can be ordered with teriyaki sauce; the yuba, tofu "skins" are served with Chinese cabbage, carrot, and scallion in a tamari kombu broth. Both downtown spaces (the other is in the East Village) are light-filled and sparsely decorated. Bonus: They deliver.

The Butcher's Daughter

The Butcher's Daughter

19 Kenmare St., Nolita

Count on Joya Carlton, the former chef at Buvette, to help open up another stellar brunch spot. Set up on the corner of bustling Kenmare Street in Nolita, the Butcher's Daughter offers the kind of vegetarian fare you can feel good about—their version of a breakfast sandwich features an egg, cashew cheese, kale, and tomato jam on an English muffin; their organic muesli is topped with fresh fruit and almond milk. The cold-pressed juices are easy to make a habit of—the honey bee, with grapefruit, turmeric, yuzu, kumquat, honey, and bee pollen is good for fending off colds. The minimalist (but Instagram-ready) decor includes big-picture windows, bleached wood, and exposed brick; produce hangs from meat hooks and herbal infusions are lined up behind the bar.

Superiority Burger

Superiority Burger

119 Ave. A, East Village
Mon–Wed: 12pm–3:30pm, 5pm–10:45pm
Thurs–Fri: 12pm–3:30pm, 5pm–10:45pm, 11pm–2am
Sat: 11am–2:30pm, 5pm–10:45pm, 11pm–2am
Sun: 11am–2:30pm, 5pm–10:45pm

Superiority Burger made a name for itself with chef Brooks Headley's (formerly the pastry chef of Del Posto) rakish take on vegetarian fast food. The menu is brief, but you can't really make a bad choice—the small-but-mighty veggie burger, a Sloppy Dave (their version of a Sloppy Joe), and burnt-broccoli salad are stand-outs. Daily specials range from soarana beans with parsley to kabocha squash with pea shoot pepita pesto. Grabbing one of the few seats is basically a competitive sport, so better take your food over to Tompkins Square Park and grab a bench.

De Maria

De Maria

19 Kenmare St., Nolita
Mon-Thurs: 8:30am-10pm
Fri: 8:30am-11pm
Sat: 9am-11pm
Sun: 9am-9pm

You’ll hear a lot about how stylish Nolita's De Maria is (and Instagram-ready, too): The bright, sun-filled minimalist space enlists lots of soft earth tones and a beautiful bar to warm its sleek furniture and white-painted brick walls. From the pretty ceramic plates to the staff’s striped Everlane-designed uniforms, everything is as photogenic as the food itself—which is, of course, much more than just photogenic. Helmed by Camille Becerra (previously of Navy and Café Henrie), the menu is stacked with of-the-moment, elevated healthy favorites (think: chili-turmeric bone broth with milk-foam, herbs, and mustard seed oil; radish and jicama salad; sweet potato with beet borani, walnut, and mint). Their famed Fire Dragon Bowl—turmeric poached egg, heirloom beans, avocado, and tarragon tahini–is not to be missed. Photos: Nikki Brand

abcV

abcV

38 E. 19th St., Union Square
Mon-Fri: 12pm-3pm, 5pm-10pm
Sat-Sun: 11am-3pm, 5pm-10pm

This Jean-Georges restaurant is all vegetables, all the time—the roasted whole cauliflower strewn with pomegranate seeds, pistachios, and turmeric is justly famous—and the menu is almost pure all stars, from fresh green hummus and nasturtium-sprinkled avocado lettuce cups to featherlight, toasty dosas and inventive, bright-flavored salads and pastas. The pale-pink walls, brilliant woven banquettes, and Moroccan lanterns make a warm, modern room full of soul. You’ll leave surprised, delighted, utterly satisfied, yet feeling light and energetic.

Two Hands

Two Hands

164 Mott St., Nolita

For classic Aussie-style avo toast, or an insanely decadent banana bread topped with honey and mascarpone, look no farther than this charming, low-key café with outposts both here and Tribeca. The menu focuses on simple, health-centric food–and the space is bright (read: white-washed brick and string lights overhead) and totally relaxed thanks to its Aussie roots.

Avocaderia

Avocaderia

238 36th St., Park Slope
Mon-Fri: 9am-4pm
Sat-Sun: 11am-5pm

Avocaderia is—believe it or not—the world's first avocado bar, located appropriately in painfully hip Park Slope. The creamy, green superfood is celebrated here in its every possible form with toasts, salads, bowls, smoothies, and more. The brainchild of Franceso Brachetti—who made his way to NYC via an avocado-saturated stint in Mexico—with his cousin (a former architect) and best friend (a former journalist) import the freshest, most perfectly ripe avocados from Mexico's avocado belt to create everything from an avo burger (this one is for the purists, it's a lot of the green stuff, really), to flavor-packed salads and smoothies that will keep you going all day. The pretty, plant-filled space doesn't hurt either.

Brodo Broth Shop

Brodo Broth Shop

496 Hudson St., Greenwich Village
Mon-Fri: 8am-8pm
Sat-Sun: 10am-8pm

Broth really is one of the great culinary elixirs—how can something so simple and pure be so incredibly flavorful and essential? While bone broth is nothing new—many cultures from the Japanese to the Irish have been consuming it for centuries—the best broth is simmered for a good eighteen hours to release the collagen, glutamine, and minerals from the bones. Brodo (Italian for broth) offers the full spectrum of broths from spicy to almost sweet—try chicken, beef, or vegetable-based (seaweed and mushroom) broth and then spike the soup with add-ins like roasted-garlic purée, chili, turmeric, pickles, even butter. We're especially partial to the Tom Yum (chicken, chili oil, lime, curry, and coconut milk) when feeling under the weather. For even the laziest home cooks, a pro-tip is to buy a jar, throw in some shredded chicken, and some vegetables for a hearty soup, or add a ladle or three to pasta or grains for a delicious and truly nourishing meal.

Fields Good Chicken

Fields Good Chicken

44 E. 23rd St., Flatiron

Former financier-turned-pro-cyclist-turned-chicken-enthusiast Fields Failing converted his passion for the most perfectly cooked, crispiest-skinned bird into a business. With five locations across the city all serving up the same four styles of cooked chicken—herb grilled, grilled mojo, pulled bbq, or chicken salad—a good lunch is minutes away no matter where you are. The free-range chickens are sourced from Freebird family farms in Amish country, Pennsylvania, from sustainable farmers Failing has built relationships with. These protein-heavy bowls and salads (Christina's Kale, cobb, mo' miso) are filling, healthy and delicious, the perfect nutritious lunch to pick up on-the-go in the city.

Dimes

Dimes

49 Canal St., Chinatown

Dimes is one of those perfect spots where you can order everything on the menu and feel really good about it. Breakfast could be matcha buttermilk pancakes or huevo kathmandu (spicy chickpeas, spinach chutney, and date relish on a corn tortilla), for lunch a watercress, farro, blood orange, shiso vinaigrette salad or togarashi salmon and pickled carrots—all of the above are the type of food so bright in flavor and color it jumps right off the plate. The space itself is a cozy, cave-like nook with simple wooden tables, bright whitewashed walls, and a sloping ceiling—all flooded with light from the near floor-to-ceiling windows out front. This is a Cali-centric place, where every bite is healthy but not necessarily health-food (there's a Dimes market retailing their favorite purveyors next door), chefs and founders Alyssa Wagner and Sabrina DeSousa have gotten the balance—and the aesthetic—just right.

Dr. Smood Organic Café

Dr. Smood Organic Café

181 E. Houston St., Lower East Side
Mon-Fri: 7AM-9PM
Sat-Sun: 9AM-7PM

Healthy fast food seems like an oxymoron—but Dr. Smood has cracked the code. The menu has six categories (power, immunity, beauty, detox, energy, and health) all of which are certified kosher. Whether you’re looking for a juice cleanse, a latte infused with anti-inflammatory turmeric, salads or sandwiches, this is an easy, super-delicious place to get something fast.

Chloe’s Soft Serve Fruit Co.

Chloe’s Soft Serve Fruit Co.

25 E. 17th St., Union Square
Mon-Fri: 9:30am-10pm
Sat-Sun: 10am-11pm

Assistant district attorney Chloe Epstein’s pregnancy had her craving ice cream—but a quick look at the nutritional label left her concerned with what she was feeding herself and her future child. She started to experiment with making her own at home, and settled on a satisfying recipe with only three ingredients—fruit, water, and organic cane sugar. Now a full time glacier, the flagship store has classic flavors like dark chocolate and strawberry, plus great seasonal options and sweet and savory toppings like gluten-free gingersnaps, fresh fruit, and warm peanut butter sauce.

Ladybird

Ladybird

111 E. 7th St., East Village
Sun-Thurs: 5pm-1am
Fri-Sat: 5pm-2am

COVID-19 update: Temporarily closed until the spring.

Osaka

Osaka

37 W. 46th St., Midtown
Permanently Closed

Treatments at this spa (complete with semi-kitsch treatment rooms) can border on the gruff side—a plus in our books: The massages, acupressure treatments, and body scrubs are intense enough to work any stress-related kinks right out. (Don't be surprised when the therapist walks on your back during a massage.) Plus, they have all the pools you need to further the detoxification process.

Spa Castle NYC

Spa Castle NYC

131-10 11th Ave., College Point

This mini-chain of mega spas offers something called Sauna Valley: You’ll find every conceivable temple—gold, Himalayan Salt, infrared, far infrared, color therapy—and an equal number of pools to match. The Texas outpost is open twenty-four hours a day, while the Queens location is open from 6 a.m. to midnight, making this a fun pilgrimage (and a good girls-day activity). There’s an on-site cafeteria and even a kiddie pool.

The Juhi Ash Center

The Juhi Ash Center

800A Fifth Ave., Ste. 205, Upper East Side
Permanently Closed

Dr. Richard Ash, who tragically passed away in 2015, has set up an enduring integrative medicine center in New York City, where you'll be shepherded through an extensive series of tests. After they'll create a totally customized, preventative, and restorative roadmap to optimum health. While it's not necessarily about detoxing, their steps to a healthier lifestyle often involve just that.

Ilan Bohm, D.C., F.A.S.A.

Ilan Bohm, D.C., F.A.S.A.

635 Madison Ave., 4th Floor, Midtown

Dr. Ilan Bohm is our man and the founder of OIM, which advocates looking beyond—while still using—Western medicine for well-being. Keeping in mind that every patient is unique and not one-treatment-fits-all, Dr. Bohm sees patients on an individual level and aims to prevent rather than just treat illness by incorporating acupuncture, nutritional therapy, and chiropractic into any healthcare routine. They facilitate detoxes, and also offer hydrocolonic therapy.

Gravity East Village

Gravity East Village

515 E. 5th St., #1A, East Village

As its name implies, Gravity East Village specializes in gravity-based colonics, which means that the in-flow and out-flow of water is simultaneous. Gravity also has a far infrared sauna, which is a nice complement for a full detox.

SanaVita

SanaVita

508 E. 12th St., East Village
Mon-Tues: 10am-7pm
Thu-Fri: 10am-7pm
Sat: 10am-5pm

While hydrotherapy colonics are the specialty here, SanaVita also offers lymphatic massage, acupuncture, and Reiki. They even have an on-staff astrologer.

Heyday

Heyday

1130 Broadway, Flatiron
Mon–Tues: 12pm–8pm
Wed–Fri: 9am–9pm
Sat: 9am–6pm
Sun: 9am–9pm

An appointment at this no-frills day spa (there are seven throughout the city) is wonderfully personalized: You choose the duration of your treatment and set your goals with your skin therapist. Every treatment comes with a deep cleanse, exfoliation, custom mask, and hydration, then ends with sunscreen protection. Upgrades include peels, microdermabrasion, and light therapy, and if you need monthly treatments, there is a membership program.

The Piper Center for Internal Wellness

The Piper Center for Internal Wellness

425 Madison Ave., 14th Floor, Midtown

Founder Tracy Piper brings more than twenty years of experience in Chinese herbology and colon hydrotherapy, which she believes can aid in everything from digestion to skin health in her one-stop cleansing center. For those in need of a recharge, there's also dry-skin brushing, a lymphatic draining detox wrap, and infrared sauna sessions.

Nuurvana

Nuurvana

27 Barclay St., Tribeca
Permanently Closed

Not your run-of-the-mill intuitive, certified herbalist Deganit Nuur uses acupuncture, essential oils, and cupping to open the meridians before every reading, which means that sessions are restorative on multiple levels. Her readings are spot-on—and you might not see it coming. Nuur’s personality is so easygoing and bubbly, it at first feels like you’re settling in for a light chat. But when she starts channeling, it’s ka-pow. These days, it's easier to book Nuur for a virtual session than in-person, but if you're regularly in NYC or in LA, a session with Nuur at either of her Four Seasons' practices is life-changing.

Morgan Yakus

Morgan Yakus

Morgan Yakus' first career was in fashion (she co-owned the NYC boutique No. 6, the creator of the downtown ubiquitous clog boot), until she felt a strong pull to explore hypnosis. While most of her practice revolves around inducing the brain into a theta state (not fully under) to help influence and re-train the brain around blocks, anxiety points, and obsessions, she also trained (and is certified) in past life regression with Dr. Brian Weiss, the author of Many Lives Many Masters. She helps clients with everything from insomnia and weight loss to stress, trust, and intuition opening. She operates out of both New York and Los Angeles.

Maria Papapetros

Maria Papapetros

141 E. 55th St., Midtown

Maria was our in-house intuitive for the goop Shiso Psychic pop-up in NYC when we launched our latest fragrance, and needless to say, she dropped jaws with her eerily accurate readings. She is extremely calm and uses meditation at the beginning of each session to create a relaxed state before diving straight in. She also analyzes handwriting and uses Tarot to establish a framework. Keep in mind that she is a straight-up psychic who doesn't hold back, so if you'd prefer someone who soft-pedals, she probably isn't the right choice for you.

Côte

Côte

100 E. 13th St., East Village
Permanently Closed

As serious Côte devotees, we cannot get enough of their relaxing manicures and pedicures, all of which happen inside a space that evokes a clean, nontoxic, lazy dream beach house vibe. Like Côte’s adored Brentwood salon in LA, the new NYC location offers meticulous service for one of the best mani-pedis around, free from major toxic ingredients and allergens commonly included in mainstream polishes (the same goes for their eponymous line of polishes). Go once and you'll be hooked.

Chillhouse

Chillhouse

149 Essex St., Lower East Side
Mon-Fri: 9am-9pm
Sat: 10am-9pm
Sun: 10am-8pm

A sort of choose your own wellness adventure, this light, bright, Lower East Side spa has a luxe nail salon with 5-free options, massages, and a café all under one roof. Start your experience with an adaptogen-spiked turmeric latte (they have their own line of Chillblend powders to help you relax, energize, and detox) while you check out the nail-art menu that changes seasonally—we’re totally obsessed with the Matisse- and Yayoi Kusama-inspired designs. Massages range from the short Express (25 minutes of deep tissue work) to the more-intense, aptly named hourlong Chill Pill. Photos: Dillon Burke

Kryo X

Kryo X

57 W. 57th St., Midtown
Mon-Fri: 7am-8pm
Sat: 9:30am-3pm

You won’t get pedicures here, but the full-body cryotherapy session—in which you stand, in the buff, in a chamber that’s chilled to roughly -240°F for two to three minutes—is bracing, but more bearable than, say, an ice bath, since there’s no moisture in the liquid nitrogen-cooled air. We left feeling less stressed and more centered, and we slept better, too. Started by doctors to holistically treat patients with arthritis, cryotherapy is believed to stimulate the nervous, endocrine, and immune systems and reduce inflammation, improve mood, lower anxiety, and enhance overall well-being. If you’re super worried about chattering teeth, start slow with a brightening cryofacial.

Rise by We

Rise by We

85 Broad St., Financial District
Mon-Thu: 6am-10pm
Fri: 6am-8pm
Sat: 9am-6pm

WeWork—the round-the-world network of comfy, breezy (decidedly un-corporate) workspaces rented out to people and businesses—has always been an ideal HQ with its meditation rooms, retreats, and fitness class offerings. And now with Rise by We, its new holistic wellness club in NYC's financial district (more locations to roll out down the line), the brand’s dreamed up a respite from the swivel chair where you can get up and move in any number of workout classes (from kickboxing to yoga to personal training sessions), as well as stoke some serious relaxation vibes at their Superspa. There are steam and sauna rooms, amazing massages, a circulation-rousing cold water plunge, and a communal—and coed—hammam area. The spa’s café makes killer juices—and come evening, healthy-ish cocktails. And if you can’t commit to a full-on membership, Rise’s $100 four-class access pass option is a solid option.

Bamford Haybarn Spa

Bamford Haybarn Spa

60 Furman St., Brooklyn Heights
Mon–Thurs: 9am–7pm
Fri–Sun: 9am–8pm

Tucked inside the 1 Hotel Brooklyn Bridge, the Bamford Haybarn Spa is a 5,000-square-foot oasis marked by hand-carved doors and branch shelving. Here, in the nine treatment rooms, Lady Carole Bamford applies her "global wellness" approach to the menu of treatments which range from massages to facials—all of which are guided by Ayurvedic principles and use the brand's in-house line of skin care.

FaceLove

FaceLove

27 W 20 St., Flatiron
Permanently Closed

If you’ve never had a massage dedicated to relaxing the muscles in your jaw, forehead, scalp and entire face...it’s insanely relaxing. FaceLove’s three signature treatments—FreshLove, PureLove, and WholeLove—all focus on massage, exercise, and acupressure to stimulate circulation and release inflammation. Not only will a clenched jaw or furrowed forehead feel miraculously released; you’ll emerge looking pretty amazing, too.

Space by Mama Medicine

Space by Mama Medicine

73 Spring St., Soho
Tue-Thur: 12am-8pm
Fri-Sat: 10am-5pm

Wellness intuitive Deborah Hanekamp has over seventeen years of experience in the healing arts. Her Space by Mama Medicine brings this expertise to a new audience with aura readings, energy balancing, crystal and sound healing, and facial attunements. The rooms in which these holistic treatments take place are immediately soothing with an all-white palette lifted with greenery and natural fibers, flooded with natural light, and so divinely scented you'll struggle to leave post-treatment. In performing the therapies, Hanekamp uses healing techniques like Chinese medicine, LED, and Ayurveda bolstered by an all-natural herbal skincare line.

Erin Telford

Erin Telford

146 W. 29th St., Chelsea

Erin Telford is an incredible breath-worker, healer, acupuncturist, herbalist, and Reiki master who has spent the last few years developing her two main therapeutic programs: breath-work and guiding light sessions (mentorship and therapeutic counseling). It's worth noting that Telford performs these therapies virtually, with clients in New York and further afield who can participate from the comfort of their own homes. Both the breath-work and guiding light programs are ideal for those who feel stuck and have difficulty opening themselves up to love, or for those of us who hold on to pent-up emotions of grief, rage, and resentment.

ModelFIT New York City

ModelFIT New York City

212 Bowery, 2nd Floor, Nolita
Mon-Fri: 7am-8:30pm
Sat: 9am-2:30pm
Sun: 9am-1:30pm

Up a nondescript flight of stairs on a well-trafficked stretch of the Bowery, the modelFIT Method relies on small movements using hand weights, a resistance band, gliders, and mini exercise balls to target small muscle grounds as opposed to more traditional jump squats, burpees, etc, in a bright light-filled space. Among the best offerings: modelFIT scuplt, which targets butt, thighs, and abs, and a dance cardio version featuring follow along-style dance moves. The classes generally fill up quickly, so best to get there a little early to get a good spot.

Box + Flow

Box + Flow

55 Bond St., Noho
Mon-Fri: 7am-8pm
Sat-Sun: 9:30am-1pm

Having a tough time choosing between a boxing class and yoga? Now you don't have to thanks to this new mashup studio which opened its doors in Noho last year. Their 50-minute classes set to music from the likes of Eminem, Pearl Jam, and even Ella Fitzgerald, include a high-intensity warm-up before shadowboxing with both weights and a bag. Class winds down with a restorative a vinyasa flow.

Tracy Anderson Method 59th St.

Tracy Anderson Method 59th St.

241 E. 59th St., New York
Mon-Wed: 7am-6:30pm
Thurs-Fri: 6am-2pm
Sat-Sun: 7:30am-2pm

We had to include both Tracy Anderson studios—it wouldn't feel truly goop without them. The Midtown outpost is located inside a 6,000-square-foot restored historic movie theater, with the full lineup of dance cardio and muscular structure classes, plus custom programs and personal training. Two studios with her patented Super G spring-loaded exercise floors anchor the space, alongside men's and women's locker rooms.

Jivamukti Yoga Center New York

Jivamukti Yoga Center New York

841 Broadway, Noho
Mon-Fri: 7am-9:30am
Sat-Sun: 8am-8:30pm

This OG yoga center has a bare-bones aesthetic—but the workout, not to mention the mental benefits, will blow your mind. There’s chanting, lectures, and vigorous asana practice in every class (most are “open”, meaning all levels, which is great for all but the newest beginner); every pose is held for five breaths, so you’ve got time to figure out what you’re doing. Beyond the fantastic, transformative yoga in the three large studios, there’s a vegan café, massages, and a boutique stocked with clean beauty all-stars, sustainable yogi fashion, and books. “The classes are packed because they’re so good,” says goop beauty director Jean Godfrey-June. “I am a functioning human being because of them!”

The Class by Taryn Toomey

The Class by Taryn Toomey

22 Park Pl., Tribeca
Mon-Fri: 7:15am-8:30pm
Sat: 9am-5pm
Sun: 8:30am-7:30pm

“The Class” is a workout like no other: People regularly laugh, cry, and scream during it, so intense is the release (not to mention the workout itself). Developed by former Dior exec Taryn Toomey, the 75-minute session is an exhilarating mix of yoga, aerobics, and strength training as well as chanting and mental work). In addition to sculpted muscles (Toomey’s incredible body is the best advertisement) and an excellent dose of cardio, the aim is to free yourself from “the sludge,” as Toomey says, meaning everything that weighs you down, both emotionally and physically.

New York Pilates

New York Pilates

262 Bowery, Soho
Mon-Fri: 7AM-10PM
Sat-Sun: 9AM-5PM

One session at this airy, light-filled studio—a slice of heaven among the rickety lofts that line the Bowery—and you’re hooked. They use the Reformer (versus mat-based Pilates), a machine that adds resistance to exercises using springs to sculpt, tone, and strengthen the body. The instructors are dynamic and personable, not to mention lithe and statuesque (Pilates is known for its elongating, posture-improving benefits). They sell kombucha on tap, as well as an assortment of gluten- and refined sugar-free cacao balls (the turmeric-dusted variety is insane) that are delicious, nourishing, and supremely satisfying after an intense class.

Erika Bloom Pilates

Erika Bloom Pilates

14 E. 60th St., Upper East Side
Permanently Closed

To give you the best sculpt and tone in the business, Erika Bloom Pilates has three New York locations, one in Connecticut, and a new studio in Los Angeles. Each space is flooded with natural light, making it a relaxing and—oh yes, we’re going to go there—fun workout. The studio’s knowledgeable staff curates personalized routines that borrow from Pilates, yoga, Alexander technique, Feldenkrais, and weight training. There are also programs for pre- and postnatal women, osteoporosis, injury prevention, acupuncture, bodywork, and holistic health consulting.

Integral Yoga Institute NYC

Integral Yoga Institute NYC

227 W. 13th St., West Village
Mon-Fri: 8:45am-7:30pm
Sat: 9:45am-7:30pm
Sun: 9:45am-6:30pm

This beloved neighborhood center for spiritual nourishment is connected to one of the best health-food stores in the West Village. Varied yoga classes take place in sun-filled studios, all with gorgeous wood floors—the vibe of the place is more beautifully rustic than polished: Yoga and Qigong focuses on harnessing energy to your advantage, while Yoga for Arthritic and Chronic Pain teaches self-soothing techniques.There are also incredible workshops (topics range from eye health to the importance of eating seasonally to how to how to give a Thai massage), and the wellness spa offers cranial therapy, acupuncture, myofascial release, spiritual counseling, and more—and there’s an excellent book alcove-boutique that sells blankets, stones, mats, and grounding yoga paraphernalia.

Rescue Spa

Rescue Spa

29 E. 19th St., Flatiron
Mon-Tues: 8:30am-7:30pm
Wed-Sat: 8:30am-8:30pm
Sun: 10am-7pm

The duplex spa is enormous and luxurious, with high ceilings, plush couches, and a posh aesthetic that manages to be both modern and comfortable. There’s a hair salon, nail studio, and fourteen treatment rooms where you can get a variety of skin-perfecting therapies like the Fix-It-All facial, an over-the-top combination of micro-current, microdermabrasion, LED therapy, and more to lift, tighten, and smooth. A facial with founder/skin-whisperer Danuta Mieloch is transformative—her touch is exquisite, and you emerge looking beyond glowy.

Flower Power Herbs and Roots Inc.

Flower Power Herbs and Roots Inc.

406 E. 9th St., East Village

Nestled in Alphabet City, this cozy herbal apothecary stocks every health-supporting botanical one could dream up, no matter how obscure. The shelves are lined with organic herbs—ones we’ve heard of like ashwagandha and comfrey, as well as ones we haven’t like bladderwrack and bloodroot—gorgeous flower essences, nourishing roots, bath salts, gem elixirs, organic mushrooms, and essential oils.

Aimee Raupp Beauty

Aimee Raupp Beauty

928 Broadway, Flatiron

A facial here involves amazing acupuncture, collagen-infused masks, ghee-powered face oils, and, perhaps most incredibly, face cupping. Practitioner Aimee Raupp, besides waking up your entire face (your whole body feels good after a treatment), can talk to you about diet, hormones, and many other aspects of women’s health—her book on fertility and pregnancy, Yes, You Can Get Pregnant, was a bestseller, and she has a new book on health and autoimmunity coming out next month. Her treatments were a huge hit at the recent In goop Health Summit for a reason—they are absolutely transformative.

ONDA Beauty

ONDA Beauty

117 West Broadway, Tribeca

Larissa Thomson was a fashion editor in her previous life, so her take on clean beauty is one of the more gorgeous we’ve ever seen. Everything from Vintner’s Daughter and Tammy Fender to True Botanicals and...goop skin care is beautifully laid out and easy to shop for. The treatment rooms are stunning—we want the wallpaper, the mirrors, everything. And the treatments themselves are next-level and nourish, detoxify, and tighten pores with transformative therapies like microcurrent, intense facial massage, and radiofrequency.

Skin Healer

Skin Healer

331 Manhattan Ave., Greenpoint

Melanie Herring’s small studio in a Greenpoint brownstone is deceptively modest, but her facials will help change your skin, whether it’s breakouts that bother you or dullness and wrinkles. Massage, aromatherapy, all manner of nourishing oils and mists, plus a one-on-one discussion (sometimes assisted by animal-spirit cards) might happen before you begin.

Naturopathica

Naturopathica

127 W. 26th St., Chelsea

Barbara Close studied therapeutic herbal therapies and integrative medicine before founding Naturopathica—so it’s equal parts healing center and spa. There’s an apothecary-like boutique hung with giant glass tincture-dispensers in front where you can sample the brand’s gorgeous, botanical-spiked skincare, health-supporting teas (our fav: the Skin Tea to promote a vibrant complexion), herbal-infused honey, and, of course, said tinctures. There’s a tonic bar serving cold-pressed juices, kombucha (the grapefruit mint flavor—omg), and frothy herbal lattes. The spa itself is a huge, dimly lit, atmospheric sanctuary with a plush consultation space (the wallpaper is unforgettably cool), sound-bath alcove, and absolutely incredible massages, facials, and scalp treatments. The Chill Facial incorporates acupressure techniques and magnesium to release facial muscle tension, the Clear Facial helps revitalize and clarify skin with chlorophyll, colloidal silver, and high frequency technology while the Nourish Facial uses lymphatic brushing, calendula, oats, and honey to hydrate and calm sensitive skin.

Park Hyatt New York

Park Hyatt New York

153 W. 57th St., Midtown

In a neighborhood that's primarily serviced by grand, historic hotels, the Park Hyatt offers an experience that's very modern. The Christian de Portzamparc-designed skyscraper, One 57, sits directly across from Carnegie Hall and offers some of the biggest rooms, square-footage-wise, in the city. Meanwhile, the contemporary interiors by design firm Yabu Pushelberg strike the perfect balance between modernism and comfort.

1 Hotel Brooklyn Bridge

1 Hotel Brooklyn Bridge

60 Furman St., Brooklyn Heights

1 Hotel Brooklyn Bridge has taken full advantage of their location—a thin strip of land jutting into the water, right at the base of the bridge—and constructed the building entirely of reflective glass and steel. A locally and sustainably driven project, much of the maritime-themed interior furnishings were made right here by Brooklyn artisans like Uhuru, even using reclaimed wood from the beloved Domino Sugar Factory. Each of the 194 rooms have a Scandinavian-style vibe, many with floor-to-ceiling windows looking out across the water onto Manhattan. The rooms—and next-level lobby, conference, and meeting spaces—are outfitted in chic greenery that lends an expansive, nature vibe to 1 Hotel's urban oasis. Another highlight is the rooftop pool, which overlooks the East River, and of course the Bamford spa.

Mandarin Oriental, New York

Mandarin Oriental, New York

80 Columbus Cir., Upper West Side

Towering over Central Park in the Time Warner Center building, the Mandarin Oriental's location is within striking distance of Fifth Avenue, Broadway, and Lincoln Center. That's all overshadowed by the view. The décor is typical of the Mandarin's modern, Asian-inflected style, the spa is excellent, and there's a pretty insane 75-foot lap pool.

High Line Hotel

High Line Hotel

180 10th Ave., Chelsea

This 60-room boutique hotel sits on ground that was actually an apple orchard in the early days—though the federally protected historic building (formerly the General Theological Seminary) wasn't built until the 1800s. The rooms themselves are modern but very comfortable, furnished with antiques and one-of-a-kind pieces that were sourced in and around the city. As for the downstairs amenities, you'll find a cozy little cocktail garden protected from the street, and Chelsea Market just a few steps away. As the name indicates, you're also right near the High Line—we like to pick up a coffee from the on-site Intelligentsia to nurse during the walk.

1 Hotel Central Park

1 Hotel Central Park

1414 Ave. of the Americas, Midtown

We’ve been fans of the 1 Hotel group since it first set up shop in Miami; New York quickly followed with two locations—one near Central Park and the other on the Brooklyn Heights waterfront. Blurring the line between luxury and sustainability, every corner of the space is considered in terms of design, from the locally made tables to the greenery and reclaimed wood walls. The rooms are minimal but comfortable, outfitted with hemp-blend mattresses and organic cotton sheets. Another major draw is the food: Chef Jonathan Waxman’s beloved NYC establishment Jams was reprised here, and he hands down serves one of the city’s best kale salads and asparagus tortellini.

goop Bond Street

goop Bond Street

25 Bond St, New York, NY 10012
Mon–Sat: 11am–7pm
Sun: 12–6pm

For our second brick-and-mortar venture, we brought a bit of West Coast to New York: Taking inspiration from 1930s Hollywood homes designed by Billy Baldwin and Paul Williams, we tapped LA design firm Commune to bring the Noho space to life. The 2,100-square-foot shop echoes a private residence—enter from cobbled Bond Street into to a large room stocked with a curated selection of pieces from brands like Officine Générale, Matteau, Ciao Lucia, and our own G. Label by goop. A clean beauty apothecary is stocked with goop-approved products, and a fully-functioning kitchen showcases wares from our favorite home goods lines, and plays host to cooking demos.

LifeThyme Natural Market

LifeThyme Natural Market

410 6th Ave., Greenwich Village
Mon–Fri: 7:30am–9pm
Sat–Sun: 8am–9pm

This shop has been around forever, and they can help you find literally any healthy, impossible-to-get ingredient you can imagine. There's a vegan bakery, a juice bar, and plenty of organics.

CAP Beauty

CAP Beauty

238 W. 10th St., West Village
Permanently Closed

CAP stands for “clean and pure,” which describes everything you’ll find at this tightly curated shop in the West Village. The gang’s all here as far as clean beauty brands go—they carry Kjaer Weis, Odacité, Tata Harper, and a great selection of dusts and potions from brands like Moon Juice, Four Sigmatic, and Urban Moonshine. They’re also known for excellent facials—for a holistic anti-aging package, look at the CAP Lift, a series of facial-rejuvenation acupuncture treatments that takes place over several weeks.

Credo Brooklyn

Credo Brooklyn

99 N. 6th St., Williamsburg
Mon–Fri: 11am-7pm
Sat: 10am–7pm
Sun: 10pm–6pm

Credo stocks a wide range of non-toxic beauty brands from around the globe, including top skin and hair care products, makeup, fragrance, and devices from brands like Tower 28, Maison Louis Marie, Solawave, and Sidia. You can also get beauty treatments here: skin care consultations, mini facials, and makeup touch-ups.

Brooklyn Herborium

Brooklyn Herborium

1301 Prospect Ave., Prospect Heights

This impossibly lovely, holistic spa-grocery-apothecary is serious about skin—and offers some of the most exquisite complexion-perfecting treatments: The Integrative Therapy for Biome Rehabilitation balances the skin’s ecosystem with a bespoke pre- and probiotic mask, herbal compression, blue-light therapy, and more, while the Integrative Therapy for Reducing Redness and Reactivity incorporates infrared phototherapy, lymphatic drainage, and herbal treatments to soothe inflamed skin. If you’re not too blissfully relaxed post treatment, peruse the store, which stocks everything beautiful, organic, and small-batch you could ever want—local honey, health-supporting herbal teas (their chrysanthemum-infused Rest & Digest blend is next-level), the crispiest apples, and the brand’s own skincare line that’s hand-crafted right here. There's a second location in Carroll Gardens.

Dimes Market

Dimes Market

143 Division St., Chinatown
Mon-Fri: 9am-10pm
Fri-Sat: 9am-9pm

Conveniently located next door to the restaurant iteration of Dimes—if you're looking for the ingredients to recreate one of the bursting-with-flavor, health-centric dishes you've just consumed and can't stop thinking about, look no further. Dimes Market is a narrow, small but mighty, galley-style grocer, filled with all the provisions one needs to churn out delicious meals, snacks, and smoothies from the average tiny NYC kitchen (or if you're no home-cook, make your kitchen look pretty instead with the selection of linens, ceramics, and premium-grade olive oil also lining the shelves). A tight edit of only-the-best food purveyors, quality produce, all manner of powders and supplements, pretty utensils and, last, but not least, clean beauty products fill the space. Dimes market is the modern apothecary for the thoroughly modern shopper—because sometimes we need to pick up a side of aluminum-free deodorant alongside that bunch of greens and crate of grapefruit La Croix.

Dr. Cow

Dr. Cow

93 S. 6th St., Williamsburg

The fabled Dr. Cow sells precisely the opposite of what you might imagine: the best tree-nut cheeses, and the most delicious golden milk (turmeric, nut milk, etc.)—its thick luxuriousness reminds us of the best kind of hot chocolate (think: Angelina in Paris, City Bakery in NYC), without the sweetness. Plus, you can pick up some Sun Potion adaptogen powders while you're there.

The Alchemist’s Kitchen

The Alchemist’s Kitchen

21 E. 1st St., East Village
Sun-Wed: 10am-6pm
Thurs-Sat: 10am-8pm

Part holistic café, part beauty and wellness boutique, The Alchemist’s Kitchen has everything from delicious matcha milkshakes and an array of beautifully health-supporting detox teas to adaptogenic mushroom powders (Sun Potion galore!) elixirs for sweet dreams, the best ghee butter on the planet, and tinctures for every ailment under the sun (menstrual cramps, stress, and more). Founded by three female herbalists, the studio offers workshops and informative panels on herbalism and the healing powers of botanicals, as well as one-on-one consultations with their in-house herbalists. (Bonus: Infrared studio Higher Dose shares the space, occupying the lower level.)

Chalait

Chalait

1216 Broadway, Nomad
Permanently Closed

New York is no stranger to coffee shops and teahouses, but Chalait is the first one to feature such a matcha-heavy menu. For the uninitiated, our favorite matcha latte—creamy and not too bitter—is a good intro to this potent, antioxidant-rich green tea. For nonbelievers, there’s Counter Culture coffee and a variety of loose-leaf teas. While there is no Wi-Fi, it's a good spot to get some work done.

Magic Mix Juicery

Magic Mix Juicery

102 Fulton St., Financial District
Permanently Closed

This small vegan café/juicery in the Financial District is one of the only places in the area where you can find 100%-organic, raw, cold-pressed juice—all made fresh in-house daily. We like the Fearless Cleanse, a line-up of six juices. Though they all have a green component, they're varied enough to make it interesting: In addition to the standard kale/spinach mixes, there's one with wheatgrass and one with E3Live. Even on the first day, we were feeling the effects of the detox, most notably in a runny nose and an energetic euphoria around 3 p.m.

Jack’s Stir Brew Coffee

Jack’s Stir Brew Coffee

222 Front St., South Street Seaport
Permanently Closed

We’re Jack’s Coffee loyalists in Amagansett, and you can find all the same magic—perfectly roasted beans, egg breakfast sandwiches, simple salads, a smattering of good juices—at the slightly-above-street-level space in the Seaport. There are also two locations in the West Village. While this outpost doesn't have Wi-Fi, it's a low-key place to get non-internet-dependent work done.

Cha Cha Matcha

Cha Cha Matcha

327 Lafayette St., Nolita
Mon-Thurs: 8am-7pm
Fri: 8am-8pm
Sat: 9am-8pm
Sun: 9am-7pm

This is truly a place for the matcha-obsessed: In addition to standard fare like a coconut matcha latte (made, of course, with Japanese ceremonial matcha), you can order their ginger turmeric version (the combination of assertive ginger, earthy spice, and matcha works surprisingly well), plus matcha pastries, and matcha soft-serve. While this NOHO spot is their latest space, the OG Cha Cha Matcha is just around the corner on Broome Street.

MatchaBar

MatchaBar

256 W. 15th St., Chelsea
Mon-Fri: 8am-7pm
Sat-Sun: 10am-7pm

The OG Williamsburg location may have recently closed, but this Chelsea location offers the same seriously good matcha, sourced from an independent farm in Nishio. (There’s a MatchBar outpost in Silver Lake in LA now, too).

Food Matters

Food Matters

Food Matters is a collective of experienced chefs and nutritionists who work as a team to offer busy New Yorkers a two-pronged approach to wellness: A nutritionist maps out your dietary needs then passes the info off to a chef, who’ll customize delicious, locally sourced meals to meet them. All dishes fit the detox bill (no gluten, refined sugars, or dairy) and are prepared fresh daily.

Provenance Meals

Provenance Meals

Scrolling through the Provenance site is kind of like taking a virtual walk through your local farmer's market, which makes sense since the fresh ingredients used for the clean, detox-approved meals (functional medicine guru and goop contributor Dr. Frank Lipman is an advisor) are sourced locally from organic farms. Deliveries are based on a twice-weekly schedule and can include any combination of breakfasts, lunches, dinners, and snacks to meet a number of dietary needs; the whole food detox bundle is particularly appealing this time of year.

Sakara Life

Sakara Life

This one is for anyone curious about clean eating but too busy/cooking-averse to do the goop detox from scratch. As gorgeous as the presentation may be, it’s what’s inside Sakara's pretty packaging that counts: expect to find three or five day’s worth of 100-percent clean, organic, nutritionally sound meals—water and detox tea included. A menu might read something like this: gluten-free bagel with cashew cream cheese for breakfast, mango veggie burger for lunch, and vegan chopped salad for dinner. The program was launched in NYC by ex-Wall Streeter Whitney Tingle and Danielle DuBoise, a former model, and has quickly expanded to offer deliveries across the country.

Daily Harvest

Daily Harvest

While it's not exactly a full-on meal delivery service, what Daily Harvest does—deliver pre-measured organic smoothie and/or soup ingredients and super-food add-ons that you store in the freezer until blend time—is just as useful to anyone looking to take their eating habits to a healthier place. And don’t let the freezer bit trip you up: fresh fruits, vegetables, and berries retain both their taste and nutritional value better when cryogenically frozen at their ripest point, which is exactly what these guys do best.

Portable Chef

Portable Chef

Short of having a professional camped out in your kitchen, Personal Chef really lives up to its name: The small but mighty operation takes your food preferences and dietary restrictions into account, and uses ingredients from local farms to design a menu for you that perfectly suits your needs. You can sign up for varied regularity, like a week’s worth of dinners, or three meals a day (plus snacks)—or just work with them to create exactly what you want.

Peter Callahan Catering & Events

Peter Callahan Catering & Events

137 W. 25th St., Chelsea

Offering some of the most superlative catering in New York City since 1985, Peter Callahan is a master at executing the perfect event. With a full team of event producers, artists, and most importantly, chefs, he customizes each menu and drinks offering to the client's specifications irrespective of whether the event is a gala dinner, an intimate baby shower, or rustic wedding (the team are adept at creating kitchens in the field to cater to every type of location).

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