Hue House, a new Asian cultural center in Midtown Manhattan, features Taiwanese cuisine, a rotating Asian diner, a vintage vinyl bar, and a wellness spa inspired by traditional Chinese medicine.
The space is meant to feel like a cultural home and offers unique features, including New York City’s first tea-vodka vending machine, a coffee and tea shop that also serves as an AAPI retail store, and a rooftop spa with treatments like gua sha and herbal consultations.
Located on 41st Street between Madison and Park Avenues, Hue House offers a food-focused experience. The first floor features Gulp, a Taiwanese night-market restaurant known for beef noodle soup, braised pork noodles, bento meals, and popcorn chicken. Upstairs is Traveler, a train-themed bistro that will rotate its Asian cuisine each season. The first menu highlights Taiwanese dishes and cocktails named after cities in Taiwan, along with the popular liquor vending machine.

On the second floor, guests will find 929, a nostalgic vinyl bar playing Cantonese and Mandarin records from the 1980s. The retro theme continues with menus printed on CDs.
Next year, Hue House plans to open an apartment. Hue, a space for coffee, tea, retail, events, and chef dinners throughout the day and night. The top floor will also welcome Puyu, its wellness spa.
Hue House brings Asian heritage to the heart of Manhattan, aiming to create a space where Asian American community members and all New Yorkers can meet, connect, and experience Asian culture in new ways.





