The extraordinary elegance of Budapest’s New York Cafe

Writer’s retreat

CNN Travel peeks inside New York Cafe, said to be the most beautiful cafe in the world.
In fact, Hungary’s most influential newspapers were edited on the second floor of the building.
According to legend, on its opening night, a group of writers, including renowned author Molnár Ferenc, were so taken with the place, they threw the key to the main door into the Danube so that it could stay open all night.
“I don’t know if it’s true, because he [Ferenc] would only have been around 17 at the time,” says Foldes. “But it’s a great story.”
The Nyugat bar, located just above the café, is filled with photographs of some of the famous writers who began their careers here.
However, it seems there was something of a hierarchy as to where writers would sit while they were inside the café.
“The lowest part, we call it Deep Water because the not so professional artists, they were always staying there,” says Tamas Fazekas, general manager of the New York Palace Hotel.
“And the famous ones, they were upstairs … and they gave down food for these artists downstairs. And they said, “Okay, write me a story.”
While its popularity, particularly with writers, continued for a long duration, the events of the coming years, most significantly World War I and II and the Soviet occupation of Hungary, were to have a devastating impact.
Many of the famous coffee houses in Budapest, including the New York Café, were shut down during the communist era.
Over the years, the venue went through various different incarnations, operating as a restaurant at one point and even a sports store.

Tourist attraction

Inside the New York Café: The story behind the world's most beautiful café

The 1,000-plus customers who visit the café every day are usually treated to live music.
Courtesy New York Palace
However, the Boscolo Group acquired the building in 2001 and began a five-year restoration project, led by creative architects Maurizio Papiri and Adam D. Tihany.
The main building was transformed into a luxury hotel and the café, set on the ground floor, was completely restored to its former glory.
The original plans were found in the basement, which meant that by the time it reopened in 2006, renovators had recreated it almost exactly.
“These are the original paintings, although they’ve been remastered,” explains Foldes.
Some minor new details have been added. For example, one of the frescoes now contains the Statue of Liberty, which didn’t exist until years after the café was first built.
Although the interior may be more or less the same as it was, you’re unlikely to find any Hungarian writers working away here today.
“It’s more of a tourist attraction now, so we don’t get many Hungarian customers,” Foldes adds.
“Even on our slowest days, we have around 1,300 diners.”
While the clientele may be slightly different now, the people who come here are drawn for the same reason those Hungarian writers were back in 1894.
“It remains the most beautiful café in the world,” says Foldes.
 

Source:  www.cnn.com