manuel cohen

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  • Restaurant des Templiers, with walls covered with original paintings, on the Quai de l'Amiraute in Collioure, Pyrenees-Orientales, Catalogne du Nord, France. This family business, a hotel, restaurant and cafe, is a Collioure landmark and houses a collection of artwork of paintings of the town and by artists who lived and worked there. Collioure is a small town depicted by many artists in the 20th century, on the Vermilion Coast near the Spanish border. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_FRANCE_MC_0524.jpg
  • Restaurant Habitual, a restaurant serving locally sourced fresh food with ingredients from Mahuella, at the Mercado de Colon or Columbus Market, on Carrer de Jorge Juan, Valencia, Spain. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0037.jpg
  • Original panoramic wallpaper painted by Jean Zuber et Cie in Rixheim, Alsace, France, in 1834, entitled The Wars of Independence, in the Independence Room (used as a private dining room) of the Palace Arms restaurant, in the Brown Palace Hotel, Denver, Colorado, USA. This is 1 of only 2 existing original painted wallpapers in America (the other in the Diplomatic Reception Room of the White House in Washington DC). The restaurant retains its historical ambience with leather seating and antique memorabilia and is one of the best fine-dining establishments in the city. The hotel itself was designed by Frank Edbrooke and built in 1892, and is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_169.jpg
  • Interior of the Palace Arms restaurant, in the Brown Palace Hotel, Denver, Colorado, USA. The restaurant retains its historical ambience with leather seating and antique memorabilia and is one of the best fine-dining establishments in the city. The hotel itself was designed by Frank Edbrooke and built in 1892, and is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_170.jpg
  • Original panoramic wallpaper painted by Jean Zuber et Cie in Rixheim, Alsace, France, in 1834, entitled The Wars of Independence, in the Independence Room (used as a private dining room) of the Palace Arms restaurant, in the Brown Palace Hotel, Denver, Colorado, USA. This is 1 of only 2 existing original painted wallpapers in America (the other in the Diplomatic Reception Room of the White House in Washington DC). The restaurant retains its historical ambience with leather seating and antique memorabilia and is one of the best fine-dining establishments in the city. The hotel itself was designed by Frank Edbrooke and built in 1892, and is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_167.jpg
  • Original panoramic wallpaper painted by Jean Zuber et Cie in Rixheim, Alsace, France, in 1834, entitled The Wars of Independence, in the Independence Room (used as a private dining room) of the Palace Arms restaurant, in the Brown Palace Hotel, Denver, Colorado, USA. This is 1 of only 2 existing original painted wallpapers in America (the other in the Diplomatic Reception Room of the White House in Washington DC). The restaurant retains its historical ambience with leather seating and antique memorabilia and is one of the best fine-dining establishments in the city. The hotel itself was designed by Frank Edbrooke and built in 1892, and is listed on the US National Register of Historic Places and the Colorado State Register of Historic Properties. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_COLORADO_MC_168.jpg
  • Modernist interior of the balconied restaurant dining room in El Quatre Gats, on the ground floor of the Casa Marti, a Catalan Modernist building designed by Josep Puig i Cadafalch in 1896, on Carrer Montsio, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The cafe, hostel, cabaret, pub and restaurant was opened by Pere Romeu, 1862-1908, in 1897, inspired by the Le Chat Noir cafe in Paris, and was frequented by many Modernist figures, including Ramon Casas i Carbo, Santiago Rusinol, Miguel Utrillo and Pablo Picasso. The cafe closed in 1903, but was reopened in 1978, with Casa Marti restored in 1991. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_SPAIN_MC494.jpg
  • Modernist interior of the balconied restaurant dining room in El Quatre Gats, on the ground floor of the Casa Marti, a Catalan Modernist building designed by Josep Puig i Cadafalch in 1896, on Carrer Montsio, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The cafe, hostel, cabaret, pub and restaurant was opened by Pere Romeu, 1862-1908, in 1897, inspired by the Le Chat Noir cafe in Paris, and was frequented by many Modernist figures, including Ramon Casas i Carbo, Santiago Rusinol, Miguel Utrillo and Pablo Picasso. The cafe closed in 1903, but was reopened in 1978, with Casa Marti restored in 1991. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_SPAIN_MC495.jpg
  • Modernist interior of the balconied restaurant dining room in El Quatre Gats, on the ground floor of the Casa Marti, a Catalan Modernist building designed by Josep Puig i Cadafalch in 1896, on Carrer Montsio, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The cafe, hostel, cabaret, pub and restaurant was opened by Pere Romeu, 1862-1908, in 1897, inspired by the Le Chat Noir cafe in Paris, and was frequented by many Modernist figures, including Ramon Casas i Carbo, Santiago Rusinol, Miguel Utrillo and Pablo Picasso. The cafe closed in 1903, but was reopened in 1978, with Casa Marti restored in 1991. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_SPAIN_MC496.jpg
  • Pelister restaurant terrace, a traditional Macedonian restaurant at the Pelister Hotel, on Boulevard Macedonia, in Skopje, capital city of North Macedonia. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_MACEDONIA_MC_033.jpg
  • Pelayo Gastro Trinquet restaurant, Valencia, Spain. The building is a trinquet, or court, for the traditional Valencian game of Pilota Valenciana, built in 1868. After facing dereliction, the building was bought by Jose Luis Lopez in 2015, and in 2017 opened as a restaurant serving classic but modern Valencian dishes and tapas. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0026.jpg
  • Pavement restaurant Le Figuier, with diners enjoying al fresco meals amongst the olive trees, on the Placa Jaubert de Passa, Perpignan, Pyrenees-Orientales, Catalogne du Nord, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_FRANCE_MC_1324.jpg
  • Owenmore Restaurant, in Ballynahinch Castle, built in the 18th century, now the Ballynahinch Castle Hotel, in the Twelve Bens mountain range, Connemara, County Galway, Ireland. The first castle was built here in 1546 on Ballynahinch Lake by Donal O'Flaherty, husband of Grace O'Malley or Grainneuaile. The present house was built in 1756 by the Martin family. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC18_Ireland_MC_091.jpg
  • Owenmore Restaurant, in Ballynahinch Castle, built in the 18th century, now the Ballynahinch Castle Hotel, in the Twelve Bens mountain range, Connemara, County Galway, Ireland. The first castle was built here in 1546 on Ballynahinch Lake by Donal O'Flaherty, husband of Grace O'Malley or Grainneuaile. The present house was built in 1756 by the Martin family. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC18_Ireland_MC_090.jpg
  • Tourists eating lunch at the Poco Mexico restaurant at Fort Davis National Historic Site, a US army fort established 1854, in a canyon in the Davis Mountains in West Texas, USA. The fort was built to protect emigrants, mail coaches, and freight wagons on the trails through the State from Comanche and Apache Indians. After the Civil War, several African-American regiments were stationed here. By the 1880s, the fort consisted of one 100 buildings, housing over 400 soldiers. It was abandoned in 1891, but many buildings have been restored and the compound now operates as a historical site and museum. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC17_TEXAS_MC235.jpg
  • Restaurant of the Old Synagogue, now an Italian restaurant in an Art Nouveau building known as Restaurace u stare synagogy, behind the town hall at the beginning of the Parizska shopping street in the Jewish quarter or Josefov, Prague, Czech Republic. The historic centre of Prague was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1992. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_PRAGUE_MC060.JPG
  • Lionel Henaff cooking a spider crab, Head Chef at the one Michelin Star Allium restaurant on Boulevard de Créac’h Gwen, Quimper, Brittany, France. Henaff was awarded his Michelin Star in 2001 and Allium was opened in 2015. Born in Rennes, Henaff has worked in restaurants in Ireland and throughout France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    24102017_Lionel_Henaff_MC_06.jpg
  • Lionel Henaff, Head Chef at the one Michelin Star Allium restaurant on Boulevard de Créac’h Gwen, Quimper, Brittany, France. Henaff was awarded his Michelin Star in 2001 and Allium was opened in 2015. Born in Rennes, Henaff has worked in restaurants in Ireland and throughout France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    24102017_Lionel_Henaff_MC_05.JPG
  • Lionel Henaff, Head Chef at the one Michelin Star Allium restaurant on Boulevard de Créac’h Gwen, Quimper, Brittany, France. Henaff was awarded his Michelin Star in 2001 and Allium was opened in 2015. Born in Rennes, Henaff has worked in restaurants in Ireland and throughout France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    24102017_Lionel_Henaff_MC_03.jpg
  • Lionel Henaff, Head Chef at the one Michelin Star Allium restaurant on Boulevard de Créac’h Gwen, Quimper, Brittany, France. Henaff was awarded his Michelin Star in 2001 and Allium was opened in 2015. Born in Rennes, Henaff has worked in restaurants in Ireland and throughout France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    24102017_Lionel_Henaff_MC_04.jpg
  • Lionel Henaff preparing potato gnocchi with lemon and capers, Head Chef at the one Michelin Star Allium restaurant on Boulevard de Créac’h Gwen, Quimper, Brittany, France. Henaff was awarded his Michelin Star in 2001 and Allium was opened in 2015. Born in Rennes, Henaff has worked in restaurants in Ireland and throughout France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    24102017_Lionel_Henaff_MC_01.JPG
  • Lionel Henaff, Head Chef at the one Michelin Star Allium restaurant on Boulevard de Créac’h Gwen, Quimper, Brittany, France. Henaff was awarded his Michelin Star in 2001 and Allium was opened in 2015. Born in Rennes, Henaff has worked in restaurants in Ireland and throughout France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    24102017_Lionel_Henaff_MC_02.jpg
  • Garden of the hotel and restaurant Montsant, in the former Cistercian monastery, in Xativa, Valencia, Spain. Xativa was a Roman town located on the Via Augusta, the Roman road leading from Rome to Cadiz, and was also an important town under the Visigoths, the Moors and after the Reconquest. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0269.jpg
  • Relief medallion of reclining female nude, possibly Venus with cupid, on the fireplace in the restaurant on the first floor of the Hotel de la Paiva, an Italian Renaissance style mansion built 1856-66 by architect Pierre Manguin, on the Champs-Elysees in the 8th arrondissement of Paris, France. The house was built for the courtesan Esther Bachmann, or La Paiva, and since 1904 has been used by the gentlemen's club, Travellers Club of Paris. The mansion was restored in 2010 by Etienne Poncelet and is listed as a historic monument. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0092.jpg
  • Fireplace flanked by statues of 2 women, in the restaurant on the first floor of the Hotel de la Paiva, an Italian Renaissance style mansion built 1856-66 by architect Pierre Manguin, on the Champs-Elysees in the 8th arrondissement of Paris, France. The house was built for the courtesan Esther Bachmann, or La Paiva, and since 1904 has been used by the gentlemen's club, Travellers Club of Paris. The mansion was restored in 2010 by Etienne Poncelet and is listed as a historic monument. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0090.jpg
  • Terrace of the Boca Marina restaurant, at Boca Chica, Dominican Republic, in the Caribbean. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC18_DominicanRepublic_MC_153.jpg
  • La Terrasse restaurant and brasserie, on the Route de Centre du Lac, at the Jardin d'Agronomie Tropicale, or Garden of Tropical Agronomy, in the Bois de Vincennes in the 12th arrondissement of Paris, during the Exposition Internationale Coloniale of 1931, postcard from the nearby Musee de Nogent sur Marne, France. The garden was first established in 1899 to conduct agronomical experiments on plants of French colonies. In 1907 it was the site of the Colonial Exhibition and many pavilions were built or relocated here. The site is listed as a historic monument. Picture by Manuel Cohen / Musee de Nogent sur Marne
    LC17_FRANCE_MC_1134.jpg
  • Restaurant in the Rum quarter or Greek quarter on the island of Bozcaada or Tenedos at the mouth of the Dardanelles Strait in the Aegean Sea, Canakkale, Turkey. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Turkey_MC162.jpg
  • Hotel and restaurant Montsant, housed in a former Cistercian monastery, aerial view, in Xativa, Valencia, Spain. Xativa was a Roman town located on the Via Augusta, the Roman road leading from Rome to Cadiz, and was also an important town under the Visigoths, the Moors and after the Reconquest. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    DRN_LC21_SPAIN_MC_0275.jpg
  • Restaurant Casa Carmela, serving traditional paella cooked over a wood fire, in Valencia, Spain. This family business was started by Jose and Carmen Carmela in 1922. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0035.jpg
  • Le Clos de Paulilles restaurant beside the Plage de Bernardi or Bernardi beach, at the Anse de Paulilles or Bay of Paulilles, part of the Site Classe de l'Anse de Paulilles, a protected natural and industrial heritage site, Pyrenees-Orientales, Catalogne du Nord, France. Paulilles is a protected area of the Mediterranean between Port-Vendres and Banyuls-sur-Mer, on the Vermilion Coast. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_FRANCE_MC_0707.jpg
  • Restaurant on a terrace of the City Palace on the shore of Lake Pichola, in Udaipur, Rajasthan, India. The palace was begun in 1553 by Maharana Udai Singh II and extended by successive rulers in both Rajasthani and Mughal styles. Udaipur was the historic capital of the kingdom of Mewar and was founded in 1558 by Maharana Udai Singh II. It is known as the City of Lakes as it is surrounded by 7 artificial lakes made to supply irrigation and drinking water to the city. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_INDIA_MC_013.jpg
  • La Belle Brochette restaurant, in the Parc de la Villette, in the 19th arrondissement of Paris, France. The Parc de la Villette sits on the site of Paris' old slaughterhouse district and was designed 1984-87 by Bernard Tschumi and Colin Fournier as one of Francois Mitterand's Grands Projets. It has since been developed with cultural venues, musical and science establishments built by many contemporary architects. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1233.jpg
  • La Belle Brochette restaurant, in the Parc de la Villette, in the 19th arrondissement of Paris, France. The Parc de la Villette sits on the site of Paris' old slaughterhouse district and was designed 1984-87 by Bernard Tschumi and Colin Fournier as one of Francois Mitterand's Grands Projets. It has since been developed with cultural venues, musical and science establishments built by many contemporary architects. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1232.jpg
  • Restaurant, in the new law courts or Tribunal de Paris, designed by Renzo Piano and built 2014-17 on the Avenue de la Porte de Clichy in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, France. The new building contains the high court of Paris, the police court, the public prosecution service and all Parisian district courts. It is 38 storeys high and resembles 3 stacked blocks reducing in size with height on top of the main building. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0715.jpg
  • Restaurant on the first floor of the Hotel de la Paiva, an Italian Renaissance style mansion built 1856-66 by architect Pierre Manguin, on the Champs-Elysees in the 8th arrondissement of Paris, France. The house was built for the courtesan Esther Bachmann, or La Paiva, and since 1904 has been used by the gentlemen's club, Travellers Club of Paris. The mansion was restored in 2010 by Etienne Poncelet and is listed as a historic monument. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0059.jpg
  • Restaurant on the first floor of the Hotel de la Paiva, an Italian Renaissance style mansion built 1856-66 by architect Pierre Manguin, on the Champs-Elysees in the 8th arrondissement of Paris, France. The house was built for the courtesan Esther Bachmann, or La Paiva, and since 1904 has been used by the gentlemen's club, Travellers Club of Paris. The mansion was restored in 2010 by Etienne Poncelet and is listed as a historic monument. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0058.jpg
  • Allegorical relief medallion of Fortitude or Strength, on a door in the restaurant on the first floor of the Hotel de la Paiva, an Italian Renaissance style mansion built 1856-66 by architect Pierre Manguin, on the Champs-Elysees in the 8th arrondissement of Paris, France. The house was built for the courtesan Esther Bachmann, or La Paiva, and since 1904 has been used by the gentlemen's club, Travellers Club of Paris. The mansion was restored in 2010 by Etienne Poncelet and is listed as a historic monument. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0095.jpg
  • Door with carved and painted decoration including allegorical relief medallion, in the restaurant on the first floor of the Hotel de la Paiva, an Italian Renaissance style mansion built 1856-66 by architect Pierre Manguin, on the Champs-Elysees in the 8th arrondissement of Paris, France. The house was built for the courtesan Esther Bachmann, or La Paiva, and since 1904 has been used by the gentlemen's club, Travellers Club of Paris. The mansion was restored in 2010 by Etienne Poncelet and is listed as a historic monument. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0094.jpg
  • Face of a statue on the fireplace in the restaurant on the first floor of the Hotel de la Paiva, an Italian Renaissance style mansion built 1856-66 by architect Pierre Manguin, on the Champs-Elysees in the 8th arrondissement of Paris, France. The house was built for the courtesan Esther Bachmann, or La Paiva, and since 1904 has been used by the gentlemen's club, Travellers Club of Paris. The mansion was restored in 2010 by Etienne Poncelet and is listed as a historic monument. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0093.jpg
  • Statue on the fireplace in the restaurant on the first floor of the Hotel de la Paiva, an Italian Renaissance style mansion built 1856-66 by architect Pierre Manguin, on the Champs-Elysees in the 8th arrondissement of Paris, France. The house was built for the courtesan Esther Bachmann, or La Paiva, and since 1904 has been used by the gentlemen's club, Travellers Club of Paris. The mansion was restored in 2010 by Etienne Poncelet and is listed as a historic monument. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0091.jpg
  • Wine storage in the Le Champlain restaurant in the Chateau Frontenac, opened 1893, designed by Bruce Price as a chateau style hotel for the Canadian Pacific Railway company or CPR, in Quebec City, Quebec, Canada. The building was extended and the central tower added in 1924, by William Sutherland Maxwell. The building is now a hotel, the Fairmont Le Chateau Frontenac, and is listed as a National Historic Site of Canada. The Historic District of Old Quebec is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC18_QUEBEC_MC_076.jpg
  • Le Champlain restaurant in the Chateau Frontenac, opened 1893, designed by Bruce Price as a chateau style hotel for the Canadian Pacific Railway company or CPR, in Quebec City, Quebec, Canada. The building was extended and the central tower added in 1924, by William Sutherland Maxwell. The building is now a hotel, the Fairmont Le Chateau Frontenac, and is listed as a National Historic Site of Canada. The Historic District of Old Quebec is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC18_QUEBEC_MC_075.jpg
  • Bottle of water in a beachside restaurant in the bay of Pontaillac, Royan, Poitou-Charentes, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC15_FRANCE_MC0415.jpg
  • Windows of a restaurant in the Sony Center in the evening, designed by Helmut Jahn, on Potsdamer Platz, Berlin, Germany. The building complex opened in 2000 and is home to Sony's European headquarters. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0636.jpg
  • Van covered with an advertisement for the King Solomon restaurant showing a Jewish family eating a kosher meal, in the Jewish quarter or Josefov, Prague, Czech Republic. The historic centre of Prague was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1992. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_PRAGUE_MC072.jpg
  • Bar restaurant near the castle<br />
on the island of Bozcaada or Tenedos at the mouth of the Dardanelles Strait in the Aegean Sea, Canakkale, Turkey. In the background is a ferry boat. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Turkey_MC181.jpg
  • Restaurant in the Rum quarter or Greek quarter in the evening on the island of Bozcaada or Tenedos at the mouth of the Dardanelles Strait in the Aegean Sea, Canakkale, Turkey. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Turkey_MC177.jpg
  • Restaurant in the Rum quarter or Greek quarter in the evening on the island of Bozcaada or Tenedos at the mouth of the Dardanelles Strait in the Aegean Sea, Canakkale, Turkey. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Turkey_MC176.jpg
  • Restaurant in the Rum quarter or Greek quarter on the island of Bozcaada or Tenedos at the mouth of the Dardanelles Strait in the Aegean Sea, Canakkale, Turkey. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Turkey_MC161.jpg
  • People eating outside in restaurants at night in Oranienburgerstrasse, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0032.jpg
  • Restaurant and cafe, renovated by architects Turull-Sorensen in 2018, at CaixaForum Barcelona, a cultural centre opened 2002 in the former Casaramona textile factory built 1911, designed by Josep Puig i Cadafalch, in Montjuic, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The centre was repurposed by Japanese architect Arata Isozaki, b. 1931. It is sponsored by La Caixa bank, and holds temporary exhibitions, concerts, educational workshops and films, and has a media library, auditorium, classroom, restaurant and children's activity space. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_SPAIN_MC_1360.jpg
  • Restaurant and cafe, renovated by architects Turull-Sorensen in 2018, at CaixaForum Barcelona, a cultural centre opened 2002 in the former Casaramona textile factory built 1911, designed by Josep Puig i Cadafalch, in Montjuic, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The centre was repurposed by Japanese architect Arata Isozaki, b. 1931. It is sponsored by La Caixa bank, and holds temporary exhibitions, concerts, educational workshops and films, and has a media library, auditorium, classroom, restaurant and children's activity space. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_SPAIN_MC_1359.jpg
  • Restaurant La Braise on the Rue Jean Jacques Rousseau, Reims, Marne, Grand Est, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_1551.jpg
  • Joan Carles Sanchez, chef at Es Portal Hotel Gastronomic, a hotel and restaurant in a converted 16th century farmhouse near Pals, in Catalonia, Spain. Pals is a medieval town on the Bay of Emporda on the Costa Brava. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_SPAIN_MC_0657.jpg
  • Casino La Amistad in the evening, a white neoclassical building built in 1870, originally a charity centre, and now a cultural centre with bar and restaurant, on the beach in Cadaques, on the Cap de Creus peninsula, Catalonia, Spain. Cap de Creus is a rocky peninsula near the French border in the northern Costa Brava, with headlands, cliffs and coves, protected as a natural park since 1998. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_SPAIN_MC_0630.jpg
  • La Maison Rouge, detail, Modernist art deco style house built 1925, by Raoul Castan, as a home and studio for painter Louis Bausil, at 41 rue Francois Rabelais, in Perpignan, Pyrenees-Orientales, Catalogne du Nord, France. The house is made from unadorned geometric blocks, and is now a restaurant. With the demolition of its ramparts in the early 20th century, Perpignan grew and expanded, embracing the art deco style of the 1930s in its new housing estates. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_FRANCE_MC_1300.jpg
  • Le Vienne cafe and restaurant, in an art deco style building in Perpignan, Pyrenees-Orientales, Catalogne du Nord, France. With the demolition of its ramparts in the early 20th century, Perpignan grew and expanded, embracing the art deco style of the 1930s in its new housing estates. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_FRANCE_MC_1173.jpg
  • La Maison Rouge, Modernist art deco style house built 1925, by Raoul Castan, as a home and studio for painter Louis Bausil, at 41 Rue Francois Rabelais, in Perpignan, Pyrenees-Orientales, Catalogne du Nord, France. The house is made from unadorned geometric blocks, and is now a restaurant. With the demolition of its ramparts in the early 20th century, Perpignan grew and expanded, embracing the art deco style of the 1930s in its new housing estates. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_FRANCE_MC_1131.jpg
  • Cafe along the railway tracks at Le Hasard Ludique, a cultural space with restaurant and bar opened 2018, in an old train station on the Avenue de St Ouen, in the 18th arrondissement of Paris, France. The space also houses a terrace, an auditorium and a workshop space, and hosts classes, concerts, entertainment and an annual festival, Le Festival Fabrique. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1173.jpg
  • Restaurant Le Grand Vefour, in a gallery of the Palais-Royal, designed in 1629 by Jacques Lemercier for Cardinal Richelieu, then royal palace for Louis XIII, and now a ministry, in the 1st arrondissement of Paris, France. The galleries and shops were added 1871-74 by Louis-Philippe d'Orleans. The building and its Place du Palais-Royal are listed as historic monuments. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1100.jpg
  • Pedestrians in Beaupasssage, a pedestrianised area featuring trees, an art gallery and many quality food and drink establishments, opened in August 2018 in the passage between the rue de Grenelle, rue du Bac and boulevard Raspail, in the 7th arrondissement of Paris, France. The gastronomy development includes a restaurant and wine cellar by Yannick Alleno, Daily Pic by Anne-Sophie Pic, gourmet lounge by Pierre Herme, bakery by Thierry Marx, street seafood by Olivier Bellin and Fromagerie Barthelemy. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_1000.jpg
  • Erotic tile fresco with classical mythological theme at Aux Belles Poules, an art deco style 'maison close' or brothel built in 1904 and opened 1920, with original mirrors and erotic tile frescoes rediscovered in 2014, on the Rue Blondel in the 2nd arrondissement of Paris, France. Caroline Senot discovered the tiles when removing panelling when the building housed her father's technology company, and has restored and reopened the venue as a restaurant and events space, also used for meetings and conferences, sometimes with a burlesque element. Photographed on 11th December 2018 by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0944.jpg
  • Erotic tile fresco at Aux Belles Poules, an art deco style 'maison close' or brothel built in 1904 and opened 1920, with original mirrors and erotic tile frescoes rediscovered in 2014, on the Rue Blondel in the 2nd arrondissement of Paris, France. Caroline Senot discovered the tiles when removing panelling when the building housed her father's technology company, and has restored and reopened the venue as a restaurant and events space, also used for meetings and conferences, sometimes with a burlesque element. Photographed on 11th December 2018 by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0942.jpg
  • Mirrored room with erotic tile frescos at Aux Belles Poules, an art deco style 'maison close' or brothel built in 1904 and opened 1920, with original mirrors and erotic tile frescoes rediscovered in 2014, on the Rue Blondel in the 2nd arrondissement of Paris, France. Caroline Senot discovered the tiles when removing panelling when the building housed her father's technology company, and has restored and reopened the venue as a restaurant and events space, also used for meetings and conferences, sometimes with a burlesque element. Photographed on 11th December 2018 by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0952.jpg
  • Erotic tile fresco with classical mythological theme at Aux Belles Poules, an art deco style 'maison close' or brothel built in 1904 and opened 1920, with original mirrors and erotic tile frescoes rediscovered in 2014, on the Rue Blondel in the 2nd arrondissement of Paris, France. Caroline Senot discovered the tiles when removing panelling when the building housed her father's technology company, and has restored and reopened the venue as a restaurant and events space, also used for meetings and conferences, sometimes with a burlesque element. Photographed on 11th December 2018 by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0951.jpg
  • Erotic tile fresco at Aux Belles Poules, an art deco style 'maison close' or brothel built in 1904 and opened 1920, with original mirrors and erotic tile frescoes rediscovered in 2014, on the Rue Blondel in the 2nd arrondissement of Paris, France. Caroline Senot discovered the tiles when removing panelling when the building housed her father's technology company, and has restored and reopened the venue as a restaurant and events space, also used for meetings and conferences, sometimes with a burlesque element. Photographed on 11th December 2018 by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0950.JPG
  • Caroline Senot at Aux Belles Poules, an art deco style 'maison close' or brothel built in 1904 and opened 1920, with original mirrors and erotic tile frescoes rediscovered in 2014, on the Rue Blondel in the 2nd arrondissement of Paris, France. Caroline Senot discovered the tiles when removing panelling when the building housed her father's technology company, and has restored and reopened the venue as a restaurant and events space, also used for meetings and conferences, sometimes with a burlesque element. Photographed on 11th December 2018 by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0959.jpg
  • Caroline Senot at Aux Belles Poules, an art deco style 'maison close' or brothel built in 1904 and opened 1920, with original mirrors and erotic tile frescoes rediscovered in 2014, on the Rue Blondel in the 2nd arrondissement of Paris, France. Caroline Senot discovered the tiles when removing panelling when the building housed her father's technology company, and has restored and reopened the venue as a restaurant and events space, also used for meetings and conferences, sometimes with a burlesque element. Photographed on 11th December 2018 by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0960.jpg
  • Caroline Senot at Aux Belles Poules, an art deco style 'maison close' or brothel built in 1904 and opened 1920, with original mirrors and erotic tile frescoes rediscovered in 2014, on the Rue Blondel in the 2nd arrondissement of Paris, France. Caroline Senot discovered the tiles when removing panelling when the building housed her father's technology company, and has restored and reopened the venue as a restaurant and events space, also used for meetings and conferences, sometimes with a burlesque element. Photographed on 11th December 2018 by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0957.jpg
  • Caroline Senot at Aux Belles Poules, an art deco style 'maison close' or brothel built in 1904 and opened 1920, with original mirrors and erotic tile frescoes rediscovered in 2014, on the Rue Blondel in the 2nd arrondissement of Paris, France. Caroline Senot discovered the tiles when removing panelling when the building housed her father's technology company, and has restored and reopened the venue as a restaurant and events space, also used for meetings and conferences, sometimes with a burlesque element. Photographed on 11th December 2018 by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0956.jpg
  • Caroline Senot at Aux Belles Poules, an art deco style 'maison close' or brothel built in 1904 and opened 1920, with original mirrors and erotic tile frescoes rediscovered in 2014, on the Rue Blondel in the 2nd arrondissement of Paris, France. Caroline Senot discovered the tiles when removing panelling when the building housed her father's technology company, and has restored and reopened the venue as a restaurant and events space, also used for meetings and conferences, sometimes with a burlesque element. Photographed on 11th December 2018 by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0964.jpg
  • Caroline Senot at Aux Belles Poules, an art deco style 'maison close' or brothel built in 1904 and opened 1920, with original mirrors and erotic tile frescoes rediscovered in 2014, on the Rue Blondel in the 2nd arrondissement of Paris, France. Caroline Senot discovered the tiles when removing panelling when the building housed her father's technology company, and has restored and reopened the venue as a restaurant and events space, also used for meetings and conferences, sometimes with a burlesque element. Photographed on 11th December 2018 by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0955.jpg
  • Rotonde de la Vilette, or Barriere Saint-Martin, designed by Claude Nicolas Ledoux and built 1784-88 as one of the barriers of the Mur des Fermiers Generaux, a city wall, on the Place de la Bataille-de-Stalingrad, on the Bassin de la Villette, in the 19th arrondissement of Paris, France. The building is listed as a historic monument, and is currently used as a restaurant and art gallery. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC19_PARIS_MC_0823.jpg
  • Restaurant Mirador Bahia amidst the mussel farms in the Bahia del Fangar, in the Ebro Delta, Tarragona, Catalonia, Spain. The protected bay is large and shallow, with fertile algae fields creating the perfect conditions for breeding shellfish. The Ebro Delta Natural Park is a protected area of wetland habitat with ecosystems including lagoons, sand dunes, salt marsh and rice fields, covering c. 15000 hectares. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    DRN_LC18_SPAIN_MC_011.JPG
  • Modernist interior of the reception and cafe area in El Quatre Gats, on the ground floor of the Casa Marti, a Catalan Modernist building designed by Josep Puig i Cadafalch in 1896, on Carrer Montsio, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. On the right is a copy of the 1897 painting, 'Ramon Casas and Pere Romeu on a tandem', by Ramon Casas. The cafe, hostel, cabaret, pub and restaurant was opened by Pere Romeu, 1862-1908, in 1897, inspired by the Le Chat Noir cafe in Paris, and was frequented by many Modernist figures, including Ramon Casas i Carbo, Santiago Rusinol, Miguel Utrillo and Pablo Picasso. The cafe closed in 1903, but was reopened in 1978, with Casa Marti restored in 1991. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_SPAIN_MC489.jpg
  • Architectural detail of a capital with 2 sculpted figures holding the Catalonia coat of arms with red and gold stripes, flanking the doorway to the dining room in the El Quatre Gats cafe, on the ground floor of the Casa Marti, a Catalan Modernist building designed by Josep Puig i Cadafalch in 1896, on Carrer Montsio, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The cafe, hostel, cabaret, pub and restaurant was opened by Pere Romeu, 1862-1908, in 1897, inspired by the Le Chat Noir cafe in Paris, and was frequented by many Modernist figures, including Ramon Casas i Carbo, Santiago Rusinol, Miguel Utrillo and Pablo Picasso. The cafe closed in 1903, but was reopened in 1978, with Casa Marti restored in 1991. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_SPAIN_MC488.jpg
  • Wooden carving of 4 cats in the cafe El Quatre Gats, on the ground floor of the Casa Marti, a Catalan Modernist building designed by Josep Puig i Cadafalch in 1896, on Carrer Montsio, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The cafe, hostel, cabaret, pub and restaurant was opened by Pere Romeu, 1862-1908, in 1897, inspired by the Le Chat Noir cafe in Paris, and was frequented by many Modernist figures, including Ramon Casas i Carbo, Santiago Rusinol, Miguel Utrillo and Pablo Picasso. The cafe closed in 1903, but was reopened in 1978, with Casa Marti restored in 1991. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_SPAIN_MC486.jpg
  • Bar, with azulejo tiles, in the cafe El Quatre Gats, on the ground floor of the Casa Marti, a Catalan Modernist building designed by Josep Puig i Cadafalch in 1896, on Carrer Montsio, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The cafe, hostel, cabaret, pub and restaurant was opened by Pere Romeu, 1862-1908, in 1897, inspired by the Le Chat Noir cafe in Paris, and was frequented by many Modernist figures, including Ramon Casas i Carbo, Santiago Rusinol, Miguel Utrillo and Pablo Picasso. The cafe closed in 1903, but was reopened in 1978, with Casa Marti restored in 1991. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_SPAIN_MC485.jpg
  • Modernist interior of the cafe area in El Quatre Gats, with a copy of the 1897 painting, 'Ramon Casas and Pere Romeu on a tandem', by Ramon Casas, on the ground floor of the Casa Marti, a Catalan Modernist building designed by Josep Puig i Cadafalch in 1896, on Carrer Montsio, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The cafe, hostel, cabaret, pub and restaurant was opened by Pere Romeu, 1862-1908, in 1897, inspired by the Le Chat Noir cafe in Paris, and was frequented by many Modernist figures, including Ramon Casas i Carbo, Santiago Rusinol, Miguel Utrillo and Pablo Picasso. The cafe closed in 1903, but was reopened in 1978, with Casa Marti restored in 1991. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC16_SPAIN_MC483.JPG
  • Restaurant at night on Luza Square on Stradun or Placa, the main street in the Old Town, with the bell tower behind, Dubrovnik, Croatia. The street is 300m long and paved in limestone. The city developed as an important port in the 15th and 16th centuries and has had a multicultural history, allied to the Romans, Ostrogoths, Byzantines, Ancona, Hungary and the Ottomans. In 1979 the city was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC15_DUBROVNIK_MC005.jpg
  • The Landwehrkanal in Kreuzberg, a 10.7km long canal parallel to the river Spree in Berlin, Germany, built 1845-50 by Peter Joseph Lenne. It connects the Spree at the Osthafen or Eastern Harbour in Friedrichshain with its lower part in Charlottenburg, flowing through Kreuzberg and Tiergarten. The boat is a restaurant called Van Loon. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0796.jpg
  • Entrance door to the Schinkel Klause restaurant on Unter den Linden, originally from the Bauakademie or Building Academy, originally built 1832-36 by Karl Friedrich Schinkel, home to architectural institutions and universities until it was demolished in 1962, Berlin, Germany. The door is surrounded by terracotta reliefs of classical allegories. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0787.jpg
  • Flower shop and restaurant in the evening, Oranienstrasse, Berlin, Germany. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_BERLIN_MC0322.jpg
  • Facade of the King Solomon Kosher restaurant, with a Star of David in the window and a Hebrew clock above, in the Jewish quarter or Josefov, Prague, Czech Republic. The historic centre of Prague was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1992. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_PRAGUE_MC145.jpg
  • The Minister of the Economy, Finances and Industry (Ministere de l'Economie, des Finances et de l'Industrie), called the Minister of Finance for short or simply "Bercy", 1988, Paul Chemetov and Borja Huidobro, 139 rue de Bercy, 12th arrondissement, Paris, France. In the foreground the yellow barge "Petit Bain", a bar and restaurant together with a concert venue moored on the left bank, quai François Mauriac. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC13_Paris_MC201.jpg
  • Barceloneta beach atmosphere through the terrace and window of a sea front restaurant at sunset, Barcelona, Spain. The customers of the terrace silhouetted against the reflection of the sunlighted beach create a patwork of beach areas. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LCSPAIN12_MC069.jpg
  • View from the side of the Batiment de la Baleine (Whale building) overlooking the garden, restaurant La Baleine at the bottom on right, the amphitheatre at the bottom on the left , located in the Jardin des Plantes, Paris, 5th arrondissement, France. Founded in 1626 by Guy de La Brosse, Louis XIII's physician, the Jardin des Plantes, originally known as the Jardin du Roi, opened to the public in 1640. It became the Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle in 1793 during the French Revolution. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_JDP_10_MC459.jpg
  • Rear courtyard garden of the restaurant Chez Felix, in a half-timbered building, on the Ruelle des Chats in the historic old town of Troyes, Aube, Grand Est, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_1690.jpg
  • La Teinturerie, a restaurant on the foundations of the former house of mayor Edouard Meny, on the Rue du Maire Edouard Meny, in the old town of Belfort, Bourgogne-Franche-Comte, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_FRANCE_MC_0143.jpg
  • Sculpture of a lion above the door to the Epicerie du Lion restaurant, in a late 19th century building decorated by Victor Blonde, on the Rue Porte-de-France in the Vauban district of Belfort, Bourgogne-Franche-Comte, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_FRANCE_MC_0164.jpg
  • Citroen Traction Avant 15, 6 cylinders, from 1950, in front of the Auberge Du Lac, a restaurant situated on the Lac de Malsaucy, with terraces overlooking and overhanging the water, Belfort, Bourgogne-Franche-Comte, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_FRANCE_MC_0169.jpg
  • Bathers on the beach outside the Restaurant Casa Carmela in 1908, in Valencia, Spain, photograph on a postcard. This family business, serving traditional paella cooked over a wood fire, was started by Jose and Carmen Carmela in 1922. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0926.jpg
  • Gatehouse of the Celler Guell or Bodegas Guell, a winery designed by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and built 1895-1901 in Modernist style, in Garraf, Sitges, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The buildings are in Gaudi's neo-Gothic style and he worked on them with his assistant, Francesc Berenguer, 1866-1949. The winery was commissioned by Eusebi Guell and uses local limestone. It is now a restaurant. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0705.JPG
  • Gatehouse of the Celler Guell or Bodegas Guell, a winery designed by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and built 1895-1901 in Modernist style, in Garraf, Sitges, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The buildings are in Gaudi's neo-Gothic style and he worked on them with his assistant, Francesc Berenguer, 1866-1949. The winery was commissioned by Eusebi Guell and uses local limestone. It is now a restaurant. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0706.JPG
  • Celler Guell or Bodegas Guell, a winery designed by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and built 1895-1901 in Modernist style, in Garraf, Sitges, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The buildings are in Gaudi's neo-Gothic style and he worked on them with his assistant, Francesc Berenguer, 1866-1949. The winery was commissioned by Eusebi Guell and uses local limestone. It is now a restaurant. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0707.JPG
  • Celler Guell or Bodegas Guell, a winery designed by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and built 1895-1901 in Modernist style, in Garraf, Sitges, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The buildings are in Gaudi's neo-Gothic style and he worked on them with his assistant, Francesc Berenguer, 1866-1949. The winery was commissioned by Eusebi Guell and uses local limestone. It is now a restaurant. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0708.JPG
  • Celler Guell or Bodegas Guell, a winery designed by Antoni Gaudi, 1852-1926, and built 1895-1901 in Modernist style, in Garraf, Sitges, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. The buildings are in Gaudi's neo-Gothic style and he worked on them with his assistant, Francesc Berenguer, 1866-1949. The winery was commissioned by Eusebi Guell and uses local limestone. It is now a restaurant. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_SPAIN_MC_0709.jpg
  • Casino La Amistad, white neoclassical building built in 1870, originally a charity centre, and now a cultural centre with bar and restaurant, on the beach in Cadaques, on the Cap de Creus peninsula, Catalonia, Spain. Cap de Creus is a rocky peninsula near the French border in the northern Costa Brava, with headlands, cliffs and coves, protected as a natural park since 1998. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_SPAIN_MC_0522.jpg
  • Casino La Amistad, white neoclassical building built in 1870, originally a charity centre, and now a cultural centre with bar and restaurant, on the beach in Cadaques, on the Cap de Creus peninsula, Catalonia, Spain. Cap de Creus is a rocky peninsula near the French border in the northern Costa Brava, with headlands, cliffs and coves, protected as a natural park since 1998. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_SPAIN_MC_0629.jpg
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