Restaurant in New York City, United States
Lure Fishbar
100ptsSoHo Raw Bar Anchor

About Lure Fishbar
A SoHo seafood institution on Mercer Street, Lure Fishbar has anchored New York's mid-market raw bar scene since the mid-2000s, earning a place on Opinionated About Dining's North America list in 2025. Under Chef Preston Clark, the focus falls on raw preparation craft — oysters, crudo, and chilled shellfish executed with precision in a neighbourhood that has shifted dramatically around it.
SoHo's Raw Bar Anchor
Manhattan's seafood restaurant spectrum runs from the four-star French formality of Marea down through neighbourhood fish houses to the fast-casual poke counters that now occupy former boutique spaces. Lure Fishbar, positioned on Mercer Street in SoHo since the mid-2000s, has held its ground somewhere in the serious middle of that range — a full-service seafood room with the raw bar as its defining feature. While SoHo itself has rotated through fashion cycles and retail booms, the address at 142 Mercer St has maintained a consistent identity around cold seafood, chilled shellfish, and the kind of crudo work that rewards a guest who sits at the bar rather than a corner table.
The 2025 Opinionated About Dining ranking, which placed Lure at #603 among North American restaurants, confirms what repeat visitors in the neighbourhood have long understood: this is not a tourist-trap fish house coasting on location, but a programme taken seriously enough to register on a list that rewards consistency over hype. OAD rankings are driven by surveyed frequent diners rather than by star systems, which makes the placement a signal about sustained repeat-visit credibility.
The Raw Bar as Culinary Argument
In a city where raw bars appear at the front of restaurants across every price tier, from hotel lobby oyster counters to the stripped-back format at Crevette, the question is always what the raw preparation programme actually says about the kitchen's priorities. At Lure, the raw bar has historically served as the clearest expression of standards: oyster condition, shucking technique, and the temperature discipline that separates a well-run raw programme from a perfunctory one.
Oyster service in particular is a discipline that exposes kitchen rigour immediately. The gap between a properly shucked oyster — shell clean, liquor retained, muscle detached cleanly from the cup , and a carelessly handled one is visible before a fork is lifted. Restaurants that invest in the raw bar as a statement, rather than as a side operation to the hot kitchen, tend to source more selectively and turn inventory faster. That discipline, applied to crudo and chilled shellfish preparations as well, is what gives a raw-focused seafood room its authority.
Crudo, which New York kitchens began taking seriously in the early 2000s as Italian-American fine dining started borrowing from crudo traditions along the Amalfi Coast and the southern Italian tradition visible at places like Gambero Rosso in Marina di Gioiosa Ionica, requires a different kind of precision than cooked fish. Acid balance, slice thickness, curing time, and the quality of finishing oil all matter in ways that heat cannot correct. A kitchen that handles crudo well is demonstrating sourcing discipline and technical attention simultaneously.
SoHo's Seafood Geography
SoHo and the immediate surrounding neighbourhoods support a cluster of seafood-focused rooms that collectively represent New York's mid-to-upper-casual fish dining tier. Mermaid Oyster Bar and Saint Julivert Fisherie operate in adjacent positions, each with distinct identities , Saint Julivert leaning into Spanish-inflected preparation, Mermaid occupying a more approachable neighbourhood-tavern register. Oceans extends the conversation further upmarket. Within that peer set, Lure occupies a position defined by its longevity and its room, which carries a yacht-interior aesthetic that has become as much a part of the identity as the menu.
That longevity matters more than it might appear. New York's restaurant casualty rate is high, and a SoHo address subjects any restaurant to the additional pressure of neighbourhood transformation , rising retail rents, shifting foot traffic patterns, and the constant churn of competing openings. Holding a consistent identity across nearly two decades in that environment is a form of institutional credibility that newer openings cannot replicate regardless of opening-week coverage. For comparison, the kind of sustained recognition that defines restaurants like The French Laundry in Napa or Providence in Los Angeles is built on exactly this kind of durational consistency rather than a single moment of acclaim.
Chef Preston Clark and the Kitchen's Orientation
Chef Preston Clark leads the kitchen at Lure. In the context of New York's seafood dining tier, the chef's role at a raw-bar-centred restaurant is partly about sourcing relationships and partly about maintaining the discipline of a cold programme that depends on daily decisions rather than long-lead preparation. The kitchen at a serious seafood room interacts differently with its supply chain than a meat-focused or vegetable-driven restaurant: oyster varieties shift by season and availability, crudo fish requires same-day or next-day sourcing decisions, and chilled shellfish presentations depend on what arrives in condition. The editorial emphasis belongs to that system, not to any individual's biography.
Placing Lure in the Wider North American Conversation
The OAD Leading Restaurants in North America list, on which Lure appears at #603 for 2025, is a useful positioning tool precisely because it captures diner consensus across a wide geographic range. On that same list, restaurants like Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Alinea in Chicago, and Emeril's in New Orleans occupy different positions and different category definitions. Lure's placement reflects its specific niche: a seafood-focused room in a major market with sustained diner approval rather than tasting-menu formality. That is a different achievement than a Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg-style destination programme, and the ranking reflects the breadth of what OAD surveys across price points and formats.
Planning a Visit
Lure Fishbar sits at 142 Mercer Street in SoHo, within walking distance of the Spring Street subway stop on the C and E lines and a short distance from the Prince Street stops on the N, R, and W. The neighbourhood is dense with competing restaurant options, and the evening trade in this part of SoHo tends to fill early , arriving closer to the beginning of service reduces wait pressure. The bar seating, where the raw programme is most directly visible and where the pace of service tends to be faster, is often the better choice for a solo visit or a pair focused on cold preparations rather than a full dinner format. Reservations are advisable for weekend evenings given the consistent 4.4-star rating across more than 2,000 Google reviews, a volume that indicates steady, high-frequency use rather than occasional destination traffic.
For anyone building a broader exploration of New York City's dining and hospitality scene, see our full New York City restaurants guide, our full New York City hotels guide, our full New York City bars guide, our full New York City wineries guide, and our full New York City experiences guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What should I order at Lure Fishbar?
- The raw bar is the clearest expression of what the kitchen prioritises. Oyster selection and any crudo or chilled shellfish preparations on the menu represent the strongest argument for the restaurant's technical standards , these are the dishes where sourcing discipline and preparation precision are most directly visible. Chef Preston Clark's kitchen is oriented toward seafood across formats, but the cold preparations are where the programme earns its OAD recognition. For context on how Lure's approach compares to the broader New York seafood scene, the peer set includes Crevette, Mermaid Oyster Bar, and Saint Julivert Fisherie at different points on the formality and style spectrum.
Recognized By
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