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Saturday, May 30, 2026

COFFEE BEANS & BEINGS / SURVIVOR OF BUDAPEST'S GRAND CAFE SOCIETY

 

In a city built on thermal baths, imperial facades, and literary ghosts, the great survivor of Budapest café society remains New York Café. 

Opened in 1894 inside the New York Palace building commissioned by the New York Life Insurance Company, the café quickly became the clubhouse of Hungary’s writers, poets, editors, and dreamers. 

Legend claims novelist Ferenc Molnár celebrated its opening by tossing the café keys into the Danube so it would never close. Beneath frescoed ceilings and Venetian chandeliers, entire newspapers were edited, poems argued over, and reputations ruined over coffee and cognac. 

 
Then came the hard century. War damage, fascism, communism, neglect. At one point the once-glorious salon reportedly served as a sporting goods store. Yet Budapest, like the café itself, has a habit of surviving catastrophe with style intact. 

A painstaking restoration in the early 2000s revived the palace and returned the café to its Belle Époque splendor. 

 Today, the New York Café is less a writer’s den than a theater of old Europe. Tourists queue for cappuccinos beneath marble columns while violinists drift through the gold-leaf interior. Cynics complain it has become a grand stage set rather than a true intellectual haunt, but that misses the point. The New York Café is far more than a coffee house. 

It is Budapest performing its own mythology—lavish, wounded, cultured, excessive, and impossible to forget. 

NEW YORK CAFE/ Erzsébet körút 9–11 1073 Budapest, Hungary