Google: 4.2 · 1,250 reviews
The Fulton

Perched at the northeast corner of Pier 17 in the Seaport District, The Fulton brings a market-driven seafood program to one of Lower Manhattan's most prominent waterfront positions. Under Chef Lei Jiang and recognized by Opinionated About Dining's 2025 Casual North America list, it draws on the daily rhythms of East Coast fishing to shape what lands on the plate. The setting alone shifts the context for how New York eats fish.
Pearl is the En Primeur Club membership app — saves, bookings, and concierge access live there. Same editors, same standards.

Where the East River Meets the Day's Catch
New York's relationship with seafood is older than the city itself. Before the financial district rose on reclaimed land, the Fulton Fish Market traded on these same blocks, and the Seaport was the commercial artery through which the city fed itself. That history creates a particular pressure on any restaurant operating in the neighborhood today: the location carries expectations that a midtown fish house simply does not. The Fulton, at the northeast corner of Pier 17 at 89 South St, occupies that charged geography and builds a program around the same logic the old market ran on — what the boats bring in determines what you eat.
The editorial framework for understanding The Fulton is not the white-tablecloth seafood tradition of Midtown, where a restaurant like Marea on Central Park South anchors Italian coastal cooking to a fixed, polished menu, or where Crevette operates a European brasserie format in the West Village. The Fulton's register is casualer, more responsive, and structured around supply rather than consistency for its own sake. That distinction matters when you are deciding how to spend a meal in Lower Manhattan.
The Market Logic Behind the Menu
American seafood restaurants broadly split into two operating philosophies. The first treats the menu as a fixed document, procured to spec, with consistency as the primary virtue. The second treats the menu as a daily negotiation between kitchen and supply chain, where what the water yields each morning shapes what the line cooks prepare by afternoon. The Fulton, under Chef Lei Jiang, operates in the second mode. That approach is harder to execute at volume and harder to market, but it produces cooking that tracks the actual season rather than a constructed version of it.
The practical consequence for the diner is that the menu in February, when cold North Atlantic water concentrates fat in certain species, will differ meaningfully from August, when different varieties move closer to shore. New England lobster, East Coast oysters, and whatever fin fish is running at full quality become the reference points. The Seaport location reinforces this: the neighborhood's identity as a former wholesale fish hub is more than atmosphere. It provides a frame for why the kitchen's responsiveness to supply reads as appropriate rather than incidental.
This market-responsive model places The Fulton in a peer set with restaurants across the country that prioritize sourcing transparency and seasonal accuracy over menu permanence. Providence in Los Angeles operates a tasting menu format built around sustainable catch rotation. Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg ties its menu to farm and coastal harvests simultaneously. In New York's casual tier, the discipline required to genuinely shift with the season is less visible but no less real.
The Seaport District as Dining Context
The Pier 17 development changed the calculus for dining in the Seaport District. Before its renovation, the area was primarily a tourist destination with limited serious food programming. The rebuilt pier introduced a cluster of restaurants with actual culinary ambition, and The Fulton is among the more substantive of those commitments. Sitting at the northeastern corner, it carries unobstructed views of the Brooklyn Bridge and the East River, a physical setting that most Manhattan restaurants simply cannot replicate regardless of price point.
The neighborhood sits below the financial district and east of Tribeca, two areas with their own distinct dining characters. The Seaport draws a mix of after-work professionals, tourists navigating the waterfront, and a smaller contingent of diners who make the trip deliberately for the food. That mixed audience partly explains why the casual classification fits: the room needs to function across a wider range of occasions than a destination fine-dining format would accommodate.
For visitors building a broader itinerary around New York seafood, the city's casual-tier fish restaurants include Lure Fishbar in SoHo and Mermaid Oyster Bar in the West Village, each with different neighborhood contexts and menu registers. Oceans represents another point on the same spectrum. The Fulton's Pier 17 address gives it a setting that none of those peers can match, which is a legitimate differentiating factor when the cooking is operating at a comparable level.
Recognition and Where It Sits in the Peer Set
The Fulton holds a 2025 Opinionated About Dining ranking at #795 in Casual North America, with a Google rating of 4.2 across 1,101 reviews. The OAD placement is meaningful because that list aggregates opinions from frequent restaurant-goers rather than professional critics, which tends to weight consistency and value more heavily than a single high-profile review cycle would. A ranking in the casual North America tier places the restaurant in a large but genuinely competitive field. Casual does not mean undistinguished here; it means the format and price register differ from the tasting-menu or formal dining tier, not that the sourcing or technique is less serious.
The comparison class for The Fulton is not Le Bernardin, which operates at a different price point, format, and culinary tradition entirely. It is closer in spirit to what Emeril's in New Orleans represents in its city: a restaurant with a real culinary identity, operating in a heritage-laden food neighborhood, at a price point designed for repeat visits rather than once-a-year occasions.
Internationally, the market-driven seafood format that The Fulton represents has analogues in European coastal restaurants. Gambero Rosso in Marina di Gioiosa Ionica and Alici Restaurant on the Amalfi Coast both tie their menus tightly to local catch, a discipline that requires proximity to supply and willingness to let the water dictate the kitchen calendar. The discipline is the same; the geography and species differ.
Planning Your Visit
The Fulton is at the northeast corner of Pier 17, 89 South St, New York, NY 10038, in the Seaport District of Lower Manhattan. The Fulton/Broadway-Nassau subway station provides access from multiple lines. The waterfront position means the room and any exterior seating track the season closely; late spring through early autumn offers the most favorable conditions for the view the location promises. Winter visits prioritize the interior experience, which connects more directly to the cooking than the setting. Reservations are recommended given the Pier 17 foot traffic, particularly on weekend evenings when the neighborhood draws crowds from across the city and from visiting tourists.
For a full picture of what else New York offers across restaurants, bars, hotels, and experiences, see our full New York City restaurants guide, our full New York City bars guide, our full New York City hotels guide, our full New York City wineries guide, and our full New York City experiences guide.
Quick reference: 89 South St (Northeast corner of Pier 17), Seaport District, Lower Manhattan. Casual seafood, market-driven menu, OAD Casual North America 2025 ranked. Chef Lei Jiang. Google 4.2 / 1,101 reviews.
Same-City Peers
A quick snapshot of similar venues for side-by-side context.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Fulton | Seafood | This venue | |
| Le Bernardin | French, Seafood | $$$$ | French, Seafood, $$$$ |
| Atomix | Modern Korean, Korean | $$$$ | Modern Korean, Korean, $$$$ |
| Masa | Sushi, Japanese | $$$$ | Sushi, Japanese, $$$$ |
| Per Se | French, Contemporary | $$$$ | French, Contemporary, $$$$ |
| Eleven Madison Park | French, Vegan | $$$$ | French, Vegan, $$$$ |
Continue exploring
More in New York City
Restaurants in New York City
Browse all →Bars in New York City
Browse all →Hotels in New York City
Browse all →At a Glance
- Elegant
- Lively
- Date Night
- Celebration
- Special Occasion
- Waterfront
- Open Kitchen
- Terrace
- Extensive Wine List
- Sustainable Seafood
- Waterfront
- Skyline
Nautically-themed space with giant sea monster murals, dock line lighting, floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the river, and an outdoor patio.



















