No doubt, the West Village is one of the city's loveliest neighborhoods, composed of stately brownstones dating from the 1800s, modest small storefronts with unique merchandise, a country church with formal flower gardens, and reclaimed port and industrial architecture turned into lofts, galleries, and coffee shops.
The borders of the neighborhood are murky, but we’ve taken them to be the Hudson River to slightly east of Seventh Avenue on the west and east, and Houston Street to 14th Street on the south and north. Though the neighborhood’s real estate is among the city’s most exorbitant, the prices at its restaurants range from expensive to surprisingly modest, with an impressive range of offerings. New and exciting restaurants include Bangkok Supper Club, in the vanguard of the city’s Thai scene; Moustache, a palace of pita newly moved to 7th Avenue South; and Libertine, which has rewritten the book where French bistro fare is concerned.
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