The Space

1890s Cast-Iron NoLita

The restaurant occupies the ground floor of an 1890s cast-iron building on Elizabeth Street, tucked between Prince & Spring. The previous tenant — Bellamy & Frost, a high-end antique gallery — operated here for twenty-two years before relocating to Hudson in 2023.

We kept the cast-iron columns, the herringbone oak floors, and the soaring 14-foot pressed-tin ceilings. Everything else, we drew from scratch with a friend from Nico's Cooper Union days.

Walls

Warm Venetian plaster in custom blush pink; original exposed brick on the east wall.

The table

A 12-foot white oak communal table, built by Nico from reclaimed beams.

Banquettes

Cinnamon-toned full-grain Italian leather, custom-made by a Brooklyn upholsterer.

Lighting

Margot's handmade ceramic fixtures in blush and terracotta, suspended on brass rods at staggered heights.

The patisserie case

A restored 1920s Parisian case in brass and curved glass — sourced at auction.

Memorial corner

Great-Uncle Lee's crew photo, his cinnamon sticks behind museum glass, and a hand-lettered card.

Greenery

A sculptural olive tree by the front window. Trailing pothos. Seasonal flowers on every table.

The wine bar

Four marble-topped seats near the back for dessert-and-wine pairings.

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@cinnamonsubmarine

Desserts · Tea · Coffee

"We're a dessert restaurant in NoLita named after a ship that wasn't even a submarine. Come for the pastry, stay for the story."

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