Food hall
A food hall in the United Kingdom is "a large section of a department store, where food is sold".[1] Unlike food courts made up of fast food chains, food halls typically mix local artisan restaurants, butcher shops and other food-oriented boutiques under one roof.[2] Food halls can also be unconnected to department stores and operate independently, often in a separate building.
The term "food hall" in the British sense is increasingly used in the United States.[3][4][5] In some Asia-Pacific countries, "food hall" is equivalent to a North American "food court", or the terms are used interchangeably. A food court means a place where the fast food chain outlets are located in a shopping mall.[6]
A gourmet food hall may also exist in the form of what is nominally a public market or a modern market hall, for example in Stockholm's Östermalm Saluhall[7] or Mexico City's Mercado Roma.
List of food halls
- Multiple locations worldwide: Eataly
- Amsterdam: De Hallen
- Atlanta: Krog Street Market,[8] Ponce City Market. Planned for Midtown Atlanta: "The Collective" at CODA, "Main & Main" at Colony Square, and "Caravaca Market" at Trace Midtown apartments, Peachtree Street.[9]
- Baltimore: Lexington Market, Hollins Market, Cross Street Market, Northeast Market, Broadway Market, R.House
- Bangkok: Siam Paragon Centre[10]
- Berlin: KaDeWe[10]
- Bologna: Altro? (Mercato Delle Erbe), Mercato Di Mezzo
- Boston: Faneuil Hall Marketplace
- Buffalo: EXPO Market [11]
- Chicago:
- Cincinnati: Findlay Market
- Cleveland: West Side Market[12]
- Columbus: North Market
- Denver: The Source
- Honolulu: Maunakea Marketplace
- Lisbon: Time Out Market Lisboa
- London: Fortnum and Mason, Harrods, Harvey Nichols, Selfridges, John Lewis (Oxford Street)[13]
- Los Angeles: Grand Central Market,[14] Farmers Market (Los Angeles), The Brentwood Country Mart
- Madrid: Platea Madrid[15]
- Mexico City:[16]
- City Market, multiple locations
- La Morera
- Liverpool department stores, multiple locations[17]
- Marché Dumas
- Mercado Independencia
- Mercado Moliere
- Mercado Roma
- Milan 44, Colonia Juárez
- Milwaukee: Milwaukee Public Market
- Minneapolis: Midtown Global Market
- Moscow: Eliseevsky Gastronom (ru)
- New Delhi: AnnaMaya Food Hall[18]
- New Orleans: St. Roch Market
- New York City:
- Dean and Deluca
- Eataly
- Gotham West Market[8]
- Hudson Eats
- Industry City, Brooklyn;[4]
- Chelsea Market[19]
- Grand Central Terminal: Grand Central Market [20]
- Plaza Food Hall,[5]
- Celebrity food author and television host Anthony Bourdain plans to open a gourmet food hall.[3]
- Orange County, California:
- Anaheim: Anaheim Packing House[21]
- Santa Ana: 4th Street Market
- Tustin: Union Market
- Osaka: Hanshin Department Store, Daimaru, Takashimaya, Isetan
- Paris: La Grande Épicerie,[22] Galeries Lafayette[23]
- Philadelphia: Reading Terminal Market[12]
- Pittsburgh: Pittsburgh Public Market
- Portland, Oregon: Pine Street Market
- Rotterdam: Market Hall
- San Francisco: San Francisco Ferry Building Marketplace
- Seattle: Pike Place Market,[24] Melrose Market[12]
- Seoul: Lotte Department Store,[10] Dean and DeLuca, CJ Foodworld, Fauchon[25]
- Singapore: Ngee Ann City Basement, ION Orchard Basement, Plaza Singapura Basement, Bugis Junction Basement, Raffles City Basement, 313 @ Somerset Basement, Clarke Quay Central Basement, Pasar Geylang Serai, PasarBella [26]
- St. Louis, Missouri: Central Table Food Hall[8]
- St. Petersburg: Elisseeff Emporium
- Stockholm: Östermalms saluhall (sv)[7]
- Switzerland: Globus department store
- Taipei: Bellavita Gourmet Food Hall [27]
- Tokyo: Takashimaya, Seibu, Odakyu department stores[28]
- Vancouver: Granville Island Public Market
- Washington D.C.: Union Market
See also
References
- ↑ "Food hall", Oxford Dictionaries
- ↑ Gose, Joe (September 12, 2017). "The Food Court Matures Into the Food Hall". The New York Times.
- 1 2 "Anthony Bourdain's Food Hall Will Have 40 to 50 Vendors", March 24, 2014, Greg Morabito, Eater NY
- 1 2 http://m.ny.eater.com/archives/2014/06/industry_city_in_sunset_park_is_getting_its_own_food_hall.php
- 1 2 Plaza Food Hall website
- ↑ "Food court", Oxford Dictionaries
- 1 2 Time Out Stockholm, p. 77
- 1 2 3 4 5 "The Food Hall Revolution", Departures.com
- ↑ https://atlanta.curbed.com/2017/10/24/16528368/midtown-atlanta-food-hall-the-collective-coda
- 1 2 3 "World's best department store food halls", Frommers web site
- ↑
- 1 2 3 4 Matt Duckor, May 30, 2013" best food halls in America", Bon Appétit
- ↑ Frommer's London, p.224
- ↑
- ↑ "Platea Madrid, el nuevo ‘food hall’ de España", Animal Gourmet, 2014-06-14
- ↑ https://www.forbes.com.mx/forbes-life/mercados-gourmet-descubrir-cdmx/
- ↑ "Go to Mexico, Shop in Liverpool", JHP Design Archived 2014-08-14 at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ Financial Express: Popular concept of a food hall comes to India with AnnaMaya
- ↑ "About Chelsea Market", Chelsea Market website
- ↑
- ↑ "Anaheim Packing House", Los Angeles Times, 2014-05-29
- ↑ Paris, by Stephen Fallon, p.259
- ↑ "Paris", Fodor's
- ↑ "Jamestown’s Michael Phillips on Ponce City Market", ATL Food Chatter (Atlanta magazine blog), July 18, 2011 Archived March 26, 2012, at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ ["Gourmet Food Halls sprouting up in Seoul", http://m.koreaherald.com/view.php?ud=20110812000676]
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑ Ultimate Food Journeys: The World's Best Dishes and Where to Eat Them, p.247