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Over the past year, the industrial-styled Union Market district has welcomed the likes of two Stephen Starr spots (El Presidente, Pastis), a Tulum-styled rooftop lounge (Treehouse), and a global plates place covered in art (Palette 22). In the last month alone, arrivals include legendary NYC piano bar (Sid Gold’s Request Room), bouncy ramen and boozy boba hangout (Mecha Noodle House), and salad stall (Kenny’s Kale). And fast-growing chains like Boston-based Greco Truly Greek and Jinya Ramen are en route to the same 4th Street block this summer. The consumer market appears to be there; some 3.5 million people visit the Northeast neighborhood each year, according to its developer Edens, and about 70 residents move in per month.
Here’s a look inside 7 anticipated attractions.
Chai Pani
What: Edens exclusively tells Eater that chef-restaurateur Meherwan Irani’s super-popular Indian standby in Asheville, N.C., named Outstanding Restaurant at the 2022 James Beard Awards, is coming to the foot of the new Gables Union Market apartment complex next year. Chai Pani, which literally means “tea and water,” consistently draws huge lines outside of its 15-year-old home base (and Atlanta offshoot) for chaat and other flavorful Indian street snacks. Chai Pani recently relocated to a much-bigger flagship in Asheville.
Where: 1325 5th Street NE
When: Spring 2025
Yellow
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What: As Eater first reported, Michelin-starred Albi’s Michael Rafidi — who just added a James Beard accolade for America’s best chef — is gearing up to open the biggest edition yet of his all-day Levantine cafe Yellow. After wowing Navy Yard with za’atar-dusted pastries for four years, all while adding a Georgetown offshoot serving fiery pies, Rafidi will plant a 4,000-square-foot flagship, test kitchen, and wood-fired grill on the ground floor of an old meatpacking warehouse. “Everything is going to start at that [Yellow] location as far as development,” Rafidi told Eater in 2022. “At night we’re going to have some fun with kick ass kebabs and natural wines.”
Rafidi plans to eventually add a lively, “habibi funk” rooftop oasis up top called La’ Shukran. The 80-seat party pad, accessed through a semi-secret alleyway, will feature a dining room, bar, big patio, and late-night DJs spinning Middle Eastern music.
Where: 417-419 Morse Street NE
When: Opening Tuesday, July 9
Bar Betsie
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What: Industry vets and buds Jean Paul (J.P.) Sabatier, Drew Porterfield, and Ralph Brabham, the team behind Logan Circle’s pint-sized drinking den Jane Jane, just announced a second venture across town. Like 3-year-old Jane Jane, which has quickly risen as one of the city’s best cocktail bars, Bar Betsie honors another partner’s matriarch. Bar Betsie, named for Sabatier’s mom who had a penchant for hospitality, strives to be “soulful, unpretentious gathering place where everyone comes to play,” per a statement. A design by Edit Lab at Streetsense calls for hip neon accents reflected off mirrored walls, wood paneling, intimate booths, banquette seating, and 14-seat bar and outdoor patio slinging light snacks, beers, wines, and cocktails.
Where: 1328 4th Street NE
When: Winter 2024
Apapacho
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What: The newly announced taqueria from culinary couple Alam Méndez and Elisa Reyna slides into the sleek space left behind by Las Gemelas, which ended its 3-year run in February. (Destination Unknown Restaurants simultaneously closed its modern Mexican sibling Destino in the same Northeast food hall.) Apapacho’s headlining roster of tacos will star slow-cooked meats like al pastor, carne asada, and barbacoa, plus a vegetarian option (oyster mushrooms) to start. The married duo most recently worked at D.C.’s Maiz 64, earning high praise for Méndez’s top-tier tortillas engineered with native Mexican corn and Reyna’s pastry skills.
Where: 1280 4th Street NE
When: July
Minetta Tavern
What: Keith McNally, NYC’s mega-restaurateur behind celeb magnets like the Odeon, Balthazar, and Pastis, brings his fancy burger bar to D.C. “[Union Market] reminds me a lot of Manhattan’s Meatpacking District 20 years ago,” said McNally, upon inking a letter of intent in 2021. The 1930s-era Greenwich Village relic, revived by McNally in 2009, consistently serves one of the city’s best ($38) burgers in the caricatured shadow of long-gone literary figures. Based on the D.C. edition’s whopping 13K Instagram followers — despite no posts — Minetta Tavern is shaping up to be a big one. Per a June photo carousel of an very-under-progress interior, the famously sarcastic owner joked it was “opening tonight.” The construction update did, however, shed a light inside a white subway-tiled space under way — a sharp contrast to the original’s dimly lit wooden look (though the pressed tin ceilings appear identical). The look and feel of the two-story corner counterpart in D.C. will be “the same, if not better,” McNally added, which includes a “sensational” private dining room and a “secret roof bar.”
Where: 1287 4th Street NE
When: Fall 2024
F1 Arcade
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What: British-born F1 Arcade transforms a 17,500-square-foot warehouse into a high-octane entertainment complex that showcases the glitz and glamour of Formula 1 racing. Equipped with 80 full-motion race simulators made in collaboration with F1’s motorsport design teams, a big bar staying open late will sling Champagne cocktails (think: a Hendrick’s Gin-infused Pole Position), local beers, and non-alcoholic options under an aptly named “Designated Driver” section. Fancied-up bar food will include items like wagyu beef burger, cauliflower wings slathered with Korean gochujang sauce, and sea bass ceviche. F1 Arcade’s first U.S. edition recently opened in Boston’s Seaport District this year.
Where: 440 Penn Street NE
When: Fall 2024
Non Se
What: Chef Matt Baker (Michelin-starred Gravitas, Michele’s, Baker’s Daughter) adds a chic Mediterranean eatery to his repertoire, complete with an antipasti bar, small plates, cheeses and cured meats, and expansive focus on European wines.
Where: 300 Morse Street NE
When: Winter 2025