71above



Positioned on the 71st floor of a downtown Los Angeles skyscraper, 71above serves New American cuisine under Chef Javier López with a wine program of more than 1,400 selections directed by Catherine Morel. Ranked among Opinionated About Dining's top North American restaurants in 2024, it operates lunch and dinner service through the week with a kitchen that draws from the intersecting culinary traditions that define contemporary American cooking.

Altitude and Ambition: Dining at the Leading of Downtown LA
The elevator ride to the 71st floor of the US Bank Tower is, in its own way, a prologue. By the time the doors open onto 71above's dining room, the city has already shifted beneath you — a grid of freeways and neighborhoods compressing into something abstract, a reminder that Los Angeles, more than most American cities, makes sense from above. Few restaurants in the country deploy elevation quite like this. The view from 633 W 5th Street isn't decorative; it frames the meal in a way that changes how the cooking reads.
That framing matters because New American cuisine, as a category, often lacks a clear sense of place. In Los Angeles, though, the tradition carries specific weight. The city's food culture has always been a negotiation between influences — Japanese technique, Mexican flavor architecture, French classical training, California produce obsession , and the better rooms in the downtown corridor are expected to reflect that complexity rather than flatten it. 71above sits in that context as a restaurant making a case that altitude and seriousness aren't mutually exclusive.
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New American cuisine, as practiced in the serious rooms of the US market, operates without a fixed canon. That's its structural challenge and its defining advantage. At its weakest, the category becomes a menu of eclectic gestures with no coherent logic. At its strongest , as in rooms like The Inn at Little Washington in Washington or Bayona in New Orleans , it functions as an honest synthesis, drawing on European classical foundations while treating American regional ingredients and non-Western flavor traditions as equals rather than embellishments.
Chef Javier López leads the kitchen at 71above, and the editorial angle here isn't his biography but the tradition he's operating inside. American fine dining has spent two decades moving away from French-mimicry toward something more genuinely synthetic. The cooking at a restaurant like this , in downtown Los Angeles, above a city that is arguably the most culturally heterogeneous food market in the United States , carries an obligation to engage with that complexity. Whether it rises to that occasion on any given evening is a question leading answered at the table.
For broader context on where 71above sits relative to LA's most ambitious kitchens, rooms like Nightshade and Norah are working similar territory from different angles. Pace and Salt's Cure occupy different price tiers but reflect the same city-wide instinct toward cooking that doesn't resolve neatly into a single tradition. R+D Kitchen sits further toward the accessible end of the spectrum. 71above, priced at the upper bracket (two-course meals running above $66 per person before wine), positions itself in the serious-occasion tier, closer to the competitive set that includes Michelin-recognized rooms like Kato, Camphor, and Gwen , though without the star designation itself.
The Wine Program: Scale and Seriousness
The wine program at 71above is, by any reasonable measure, a serious operation. Wine Director Catherine Morel oversees a list of approximately 1,430 selections backed by an inventory of 7,740 bottles , figures that place it well above what most restaurant programs maintain. The list leans into Burgundy, France more broadly, California, and Italy, which is a curatorial position rather than an accident: those four categories represent the intersection of classical authority and West Coast relevance that the room's clientele is most likely to understand and seek out.
Pricing runs at the higher end. The list carries many bottles above $100, which signals that this program is built around collector-interest bottles and premium appellations rather than accessible everyday pours. The corkage fee is set at $50, which is standard for a room at this level in Los Angeles. For a city that now has a sophisticated wine-collector culture , driven partly by proximity to Napa and Sonoma and partly by the density of high-net-worth residents , a program of this depth makes sense as a draw in its own right.
Programs of comparable ambition in the national peer set include the wine operations at Le Bernardin in New York City and The French Laundry in Napa, both of which function as destinations partly on the strength of their cellars. 71above isn't at that tier of national recognition, but the inventory depth suggests the program is built for a customer who arrives with a specific bottle in mind or expects serious list navigation.
Recognition and Where It Sits in the Field
Opinionated About Dining, the data-driven restaurant ranking operation that aggregates expert reviewer scores, placed 71above at #338 among North American restaurants in 2024 and in its recommended tier in 2023. That's a meaningful signal: OAD's methodology relies on a distributed panel of serious eaters rather than a single publication's voice, so a sustained presence on that list indicates genuine consistency rather than a one-cycle anomaly.
Within Los Angeles specifically, that ranking puts 71above in the vicinity of rooms that are working hard and recognized for it , not at the leading of the city's competitive hierarchy (Kato, Hayato, and Vespertine operate at a different altitude of critical recognition), but in a tier that makes it a reasonable choice for a special-occasion dinner when you want serious cooking and serious wine in the same room. Nationally, rooms like Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Alinea in Chicago, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, and Emeril's in New Orleans represent different expressions of what American fine dining can be; 71above's OAD ranking places it in productive conversation with that broader field.
Planning Your Visit
71above runs different service formats depending on the day. Tuesday through Thursday the kitchen serves both lunch (11:30am to 2pm) and dinner (4pm to 9:30pm). Monday, Saturday, and Sunday are dinner-only, opening at 5pm, with Saturday extending service to 11pm. Friday runs dinner from 4pm to 11pm, skipping lunch. The address is 633 W 5th Street, 71st floor, in downtown Los Angeles's financial district , accessible from the Pershing Square Metro station on the B and D lines, though the neighborhood's evening parking situation makes driving relatively manageable outside of rush hour.
The $50 corkage fee is worth noting if you're planning to bring a bottle from a collection; with a list of 1,430 selections already on offer, the decision to bring your own should be driven by something specific rather than a general preference. Reservations are advisable, particularly for Friday and Saturday evenings when the extended service hours draw larger volumes. For a fuller picture of where to eat, stay, drink, and explore beyond downtown, see our full Los Angeles restaurants guide, our full Los Angeles hotels guide, our full Los Angeles bars guide, our full Los Angeles wineries guide, and our full Los Angeles experiences guide.
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Cuisine Context
A compact peer snapshot based on similar venues we track.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 71above | New American | WINE: Wine Strengths: Burgundy, France, California, Italy Pricing: $$$ i Wine pr… | This venue |
| Kato | New Taiwanese, Asian | Michelin 1 Star | New Taiwanese, Asian, $$$$ |
| Hayato | Japanese | Michelin 2 Star | Japanese, $$$$ |
| Vespertine | Progressive, Contemporary | Michelin 2 Star | Progressive, Contemporary, $$$$ |
| Camphor | French-Asian, French | Michelin 1 Star | French-Asian, French, $$$$ |
| Gwen | New American, Steakhouse | Michelin 1 Star | New American, Steakhouse, $$$$ |
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