Skip to main content

    Restaurant in Vancouver, Canada · Inside The Sutton Place Hotel

    Boulevard Kitchen & Oyster Bar

    665Pearl Points

    Vancouver's most complete seafood room. Book it.

    Boulevard Kitchen & Oyster Bar, Restaurant in Vancouver

    About Boulevard Kitchen & Oyster Bar

    Vancouver's most versatile seafood room at the $$$$ tier. Boulevard Kitchen & Oyster Bar holds a Michelin Plate (2025) and an OAD Casual North America ranking, with a kitchen that combines French technique, Pacific ingredients, and Asian accents. Book for the oyster program, come back for the composed dishes and wine list — this is a multi-visit restaurant in a city with real competition at this price.

    Vancouver's Most Complete Seafood Room — If You Know How to Use It

    If you're choosing between Boulevard Kitchen & Oyster Bar and Kissa Tanto for a serious dinner in Vancouver, the decision comes down to what kind of experience you're after. Kissa Tanto is more singular, more intimate, and harder to book. Boulevard is larger, more versatile, and more likely to reward repeat visits — precisely because the menu has enough range to support a multi-visit strategy across different dining formats. At the $$$$ price point, Boulevard earns its place not by being the most focused room in the city, but by being the most usable one.

    The restaurant has been operating long enough to build a real track record. Opinionated About Dining ranked it #38 in North America for Casual dining in 2023, #111 in 2024, and back up to #98 in 2025 , a trajectory that reflects genuine consistency rather than a single breakout moment. It also holds a Michelin Plate (2025), which confirms it's meeting a verifiable technical standard even if it hasn't crossed into star territory. With a Google rating of 4.4 across 1,503 reviews, the consensus is unusually stable for a room this size.

    The Room

    Boulevard occupies a large footprint on Burrard Street, but the design keeps it from feeling diffuse. Hand-painted tile floors, marble-topped bars, leather seating, and considered lighting create a room that reads as genuinely luxurious without relying on austerity. There are several distinct dining spaces, which matters practically: the bar area functions differently from the main dining room, and the room's scale means groups of different sizes can find a format that works. Visually, it's one of the more polished hotel-adjacent dining rooms in Vancouver , comparable in ambition to what you'd find at Barbara, though with a more classic sensibility.

    The Kitchen

    The cooking at Boulevard sits at the intersection of French technique, Pacific ingredients, and Asian accents , a combination that works because it's executed with discipline rather than applied as a concept. The team is led by Roger Ma, with Iron Chef Alex Chen and chef de cuisine Daniel Kim. That combination of institutional credibility and day-to-day kitchen depth is one of the reasons the menu holds together across multiple visits rather than exhausting itself on a single brilliant idea.

    The OAD notes are worth reading carefully: baked oysters with creamed spinach and garlic bread crumbs, house-made pasta with Pacific white prawns, Humboldt squid, clams and mussels finished with Calabrian chili bread crumbs, and a whole roasted cauliflower with curry leaves, green chutney and coconut turmeric sauce. These aren't just dishes , they're different entry points into what the kitchen does well. The slow-cooked halibut in a truffle jacket, flagged by OAD as a special-order item, is the kind of dish worth planning around on a return visit. The cellar leans toward France and new-world labels with old-world personalities, which is a useful frame if you're building a pairing. Desserts by Kenta Takahashi have drawn specific recognition from OAD , worth leaving room for.

    Multi-Visit Strategy

    Boulevard's scale is actually an argument for coming back, not a mark against it. Visit one: anchor on the oyster program and the raw bar, use the bar seating format, and treat it as a calibration meal to understand the kitchen's range. This is also the lowest-commitment entry point at the $$$$ tier , bar dining here is more accessible than a full table booking and lets you move at your own pace.

    Visit two: book a table in the main dining room and go deeper into the composed dishes. The pasta, the slow-cooked halibut (call ahead to confirm availability as a special order), and the cauliflower represent three genuinely different expressions of what the kitchen does , French-leaning, Pacific-forward, and vegetable-focused. If you're exploring the full range of Vancouver's restaurant scene, this visit positions Boulevard in its proper context alongside AnnaLena and Masayoshi.

    Visit three: bring a guest who hasn't been, lean into the wine list, and let the sommelier work. The cellar's old-world personality in new-world bottles is the kind of program that benefits from a conversation rather than a solo scan of the list. For Canadian seafood-focused fine dining comparisons at this level, the closest reference points outside Vancouver would be Tanière³ in Quebec City or Alo in Toronto , both strong in their own categories but operating in different ingredient-driven traditions.

    For food and travel enthusiasts exploring the Pacific Northwest's seafood-forward cooking tradition, Boulevard also connects to a broader conversation that includes Fawn in Decatur and, at the highest technical level, Le Bernardin in New York City. Boulevard isn't operating at Le Bernardin's precision, but it's the closest Vancouver equivalent in terms of seafood as the genuine centre of gravity rather than one option among many.

    The Verdict

    Book Boulevard if you want Vancouver's most developed seafood program in a room that can handle multiple formats and occasions. It's not the most intimate dining experience in the city , Kissa Tanto or Masayoshi will give you that , but it's the one you'll want to return to. The multi-visit case is real here, and that's the strongest argument for a $$$$ restaurant in a city with genuine competition at this tier.

    Know Before You Go

    • Address: 845 Burrard St, Vancouver, BC V6Z 2K6
    • Price: $$$$
    • Cuisine: Seafood, French-Asian accents
    • Awards: Michelin Plate (2025); OAD Casual North America #98 (2025)
    • Booking difficulty: Hard , reserve well in advance for main dining room; bar seating offers more flexibility
    • Leading for: Seafood-focused occasions, multi-visit exploration, wine-pairing dinners, hotel guests nearby on Burrard
    • Special order note: The slow-cooked halibut in a truffle jacket is a confirmed highlight , contact the restaurant ahead of your visit to confirm availability
    • Google rating: 4.4 / 5 (1,503 reviews)
    • Explore more: Vancouver restaurants · Vancouver hotels · Vancouver bars · Vancouver experiences

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Does Boulevard Kitchen & Oyster Bar handle dietary restrictions?

    The kitchen's range works in your favour here. The menu spans raw bar, house-made pasta, whole-roasted vegetables (the cauliflower with curry leaves and coconut turmeric sauce is a documented option), and seafood-forward mains, giving the team enough material to work with for most restrictions. Call ahead for anything requiring significant substitution — at $$$$ pricing with a kitchen led by chef de cuisine Daniel Kim, that conversation is worth having before you arrive.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Boulevard Kitchen & Oyster Bar?

    Boulevard's strength is its breadth, not a fixed tasting format — the menu rewards ordering across sections rather than following a set sequence. If a tasting menu is available, the slow-cooked halibut in a truffle jacket (a noted special-order dish) and desserts by Kenta Takahashi are the anchors worth building around. For a structured omakase-style experience, Masayoshi is the closer comparison; Boulevard suits guests who want flexibility within a serious kitchen.

    Can I eat at the bar at Boulevard Kitchen & Oyster Bar?

    Yes, and it's one of the better ways to use the room. The marble-topped bars are a deliberate part of the design, not an afterthought, and the full menu is accessible from that position. Solo diners and pairs who want to anchor on the oyster program and raw bar without committing to a full table reservation will find the bar format works well here.

    Is Boulevard Kitchen & Oyster Bar good for solo dining?

    It's a solid solo option by Vancouver standards. The bar seating removes any awkwardness around table sizing, and the menu scales down naturally — you can build a meal around oysters, a pasta, and one main without over-ordering. At $$$$ pricing, solo dining here costs less than a comparable tasting-menu seat at Masayoshi, and the OAD Top 100 (2025) ranking gives you confidence the kitchen is performing.

    Is Boulevard Kitchen & Oyster Bar worth the price?

    At $$$$ in Vancouver, Boulevard earns its price through range and consistency rather than a single showpiece dish. The Michelin Plate (2025) and OAD Casual North America #98 (2025) ranking — up from #111 in 2024 and #38 in 2023 — indicate a kitchen trending in the right direction. It's worth it if you want a room that handles multiple formats (raw bar, pasta, whole fish, dessert program) at a high level; if you want a single-focus precision meal, Masayoshi or Kissa Tanto may deliver better value for your specific intent.

    Location

    845 Burrard St, Vancouver, BC V6Z 2K6, Canada

    Vancouver, Canada

    Compare Boulevard Kitchen & Oyster Bar

    Is Boulevard Kitchen & Oyster Bar Worth It?
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    Boulevard Kitchen & Oyster Bar$$$$Hard
    AnnaLena$$$$Unknown
    iDen & QuanJuDe Beijing Duck House$$$$Unknown
    Kissa Tanto$$$$Unknown
    Masayoshi$$$$Unknown
    Published on Main$$$Unknown

    Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.

    Also Consider

    How It Compares

    At the $$$$ tier in Vancouver, Boulevard Kitchen & Oyster Bar sits in a different category from most of its peers because of its scale and versatility. Masayoshi and Kissa Tanto are more singular experiences — tighter rooms, more focused menus, and a stronger argument for a single defining meal. If you want the most intimate or conceptually coherent dining experience in Vancouver at this price, either of those two edges Boulevard. But both are harder to book and less forgiving of mixed-group dining needs.

    AnnaLena is the closest peer in terms of room quality and contemporary ambition, but its menu is more produce-driven and less seafood-centred. If seafood is your priority, Boulevard wins that comparison clearly. iDen & QuanJuDe Beijing Duck House operates in a different cuisine tradition entirely and is a better choice if you want a whole-duck-centred occasion rather than a seafood-forward progression. For diners watching the spend, Published on Main at $$$ delivers a focused contemporary tasting experience at a lower price point — the right trade-off if you'd rather save budget for wine.

    The practical case for Boulevard over its competitors is booking flexibility and occasion range. It can handle a two-top anniversary dinner, a solo bar visit, or a four-person group with different preferences across the same menu. That versatility, combined with its OAD Top 100 Casual North America ranking and Michelin Plate, makes it the default recommendation for visitors who want one confirmed $$$$ booking in Vancouver and aren't sure of the exact format yet.

    Recognized By

    Keep this place

    Save or rate Boulevard Kitchen & Oyster Bar on Pearl

    Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.