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Melbourne, Australia

Vue de Monde

CuisineAustralian Fine Dining
Executive ChefHugh Allen
LocationMelbourne, Australia
La Liste
The Best Chef
Wine Spectator
Star Wine List

On the 55th floor of Rialto Towers, Vue de Monde occupies one of Melbourne's most altitude-defining dining rooms, pairing Australian fine dining with a wine list of 2,000 selections spanning Burgundy, Bordeaux, and Australia's own regions. Rated 97.5 points on La Liste's 2025 global ranking, the restaurant under chef Hugh Allen draws serious attention from both the local and international dining circuit.

Vue de Monde restaurant in Melbourne, Australia
About

Melbourne at Height: The Fine Dining Floor Above Collins Street

There are few dining rooms in Australia where the physical approach is part of the meal's grammar. The express lift to the 55th floor of Rialto Towers deposits you into a different register entirely, the city's grid receding below, Port Phillip Bay visible on clear evenings, the CBD reduced to geometry. This kind of elevation is rarely incidental in fine dining; here it shapes the room's sense of occasion before a single plate arrives. Melbourne has built its fine dining identity around intimacy and neighbourhood grain, through laneway restaurants and converted warehouses, but Vue de Monde at 525 Collins Street represents the opposite impulse: height as theatre, verticality as editorial statement.

That positioning places it in a specific peer tier within Australian fine dining, one occupied by a small number of rooms where the occasion is as calibrated as the cooking. Comparable coordinates exist at Rockpool in Sydney or, in a more rural register, at Brae in Birregurra, though each takes a structurally different approach to what Australian fine dining means in 2025. Vue de Monde's answer has consistently leaned toward French-inflected formality married to native Australian ingredients and producers.

What the La Liste Score Signals About the Room

La Liste's global restaurant ranking draws on critic reviews, guide scores, and user data across more than 600 sources. A score of 97.5 points in 2025, edging slightly from 96 points the year prior, places Vue de Monde inside the upper tier of globally recognised dining rooms, a bracket occupied by perhaps 30 to 40 restaurants worldwide that consistently score at this level across the aggregated data. That movement upward across two consecutive years is a more meaningful signal than a single snapshot: it suggests consistent performance rather than a one-cycle spike.

Within Melbourne, this puts the restaurant in a different competitive set from the broader contemporary Australian scene. Attica operates from a firmly Australian Modern framework, prioritising indigenous ingredients and a documentary relationship with country, while Vue de Monde maintains a French-Australian synthesis that places it closer, philosophically, to the Franco-Australian fine dining continuum visible at Botanic in Adelaide or, internationally, at the technical precision of rooms like Le Bernardin in New York City. The comparison set matters because it tells you what kind of investment you are making when you book.

The Sustainability Framework Inside Australian Fine Dining

The most significant shift in Australian fine dining over the past decade has not been stylistic but ethical, specifically around how kitchens source, use, and account for their ingredients. The country's geographic scale, combined with a small population relative to its landmass, has pushed serious restaurants toward tighter producer relationships, whole-animal and whole-produce thinking, and reduced import dependency. At the upper end of this movement, sustainability is not a marketing posture but a structural constraint that shapes menus from the ground up.

This framework has particular relevance for a room operating at Vue de Monde's price point and expectation level. At this tier globally, ingredient sourcing is understood as an expression of culinary position, not merely an operational choice. The shift away from luxury imports toward Australian native produce and regional suppliers is visible across the country's fine dining tier, from Amaru in Armadale to Brae in Birregurra, and it represents a meaningful divergence from the European fine dining model that historically prized provenance from France or Japan above domestic sources.

Chef Hugh Allen's position within this evolution is worth contextualising. Leading the kitchen at a room that scores in the upper bracket of global rankings while maintaining a cuisine framed as Australian and French simultaneously requires navigating the tension between French classical technique, which assumes a particular pantry, and an honest Australian sourcing model, which offers a very different one. The resolution of that tension, through native botanicals, Australian coastal seafood, and producers whose practices align with reduced-impact farming, is where contemporary Australian fine dining makes its most distinctive argument to international audiences.

The Wine Program: 2,000 Selections at Considerable Depth

A wine list of 2,000 selections with a cellar inventory of 7,000 bottles is a serious commitment at any address. At Rialto, the program is anchored by strength across Australia, Burgundy, Bordeaux, France, Italy, and Spain, a configuration that mirrors the Franco-Australian culinary synthesis of the kitchen while extending into the Italian and Spanish regions that have become increasingly important to sommelier culture globally. Wine Director Dorian Guillon and sommelier team members Mathieu Gobin and Fergus Watson manage a list at a pricing tier that skews toward the premium end, with a significant proportion of bottles above the $100 threshold.

The Star Wine List recognition, awarded in December 2021, provides an external validation point for the list's depth and curation. For a room making the argument that Australian fine dining deserves global standing, the wine program is a non-trivial part of that case. Australia's own wine regions, from the Yarra Valley to the Clare Valley and the cooler southern reaches of Victoria, have produced a generation of small-production wines that now appear on serious international lists, and a program with this depth is positioned to showcase that evolution rather than default entirely to French prestige labels.

For context on how Melbourne's wine culture sits alongside its dining scene, the full Melbourne wineries guide maps the regional producers that feed into rooms like this one.

Melbourne's Fine Dining Geography

Collins Street's western end, where Rialto Towers stands, is a different Melbourne from the laneway precincts further east. The CBD's financial and legal district has less of the pedestrian grain that defines the city's food culture at street level, which means Vue de Monde operates somewhat apart from the density of restaurant options that characterises neighbourhoods like Fitzroy or Carlton. That separation is intentional and structural: this is not a walk-in restaurant or a casual second option. It functions as a destination, which is precisely what its format demands.

The broader Melbourne dining spectrum stretches from this altitude down through mid-market standouts like Chin Chin and Flower Drum, through neighbourhood anchors like 48h Pizza e Gnocchi Bar and Charrd. The full range is covered in the Melbourne restaurants guide. For international comparison, rooms operating at a structurally similar level of ambition include Atomix in New York City and Bacchus in Brisbane, each anchoring their respective cities' fine dining identities in different ways.

Those planning a full Melbourne visit can cross-reference the Melbourne hotels guide, the bars guide, and the experiences guide to build a complete itinerary around the city's hospitality offering. Vue de Monde serves both lunch and dinner, and the pricing at the cuisine tier places a typical two-course meal above the $66 threshold, consistent with a room operating at this level of award recognition. Reservations at this tier book ahead, and the 55th-floor location at Rialto Towers, 525 Collins Street, is accessible directly from the CBD's tram network on Collins Street.

Among comparable rooms nationally, 400 Gradi in Brunswick East illustrates how different Melbourne's dining register can be just a few suburbs north, while Botanic in Adelaide offers the closest interstate analogue to the Franco-Australian fine dining argument Vue de Monde continues to develop from its position above the city's skyline.

What People Recommend at Vue de Monde

Vue de Monde draws consistent mention for the integration of its room, wine program, and kitchen output as a single experience rather than separable components. The Google rating of 4.7 across more than 2,000 reviews indicates sustained performance across a large review sample, which at this price point suggests that the occasion meets expectation reliably. Diners returning to the venue tend to cite the wine service and the room itself alongside the cooking, which reflects the degree to which the program functions as a whole.

Chef Hugh Allen leads a kitchen working in Australian and French cuisine, and the restaurant's La Liste scores in both 2025 (97.5 points) and 2026 (96 points) confirm external critical recognition for that synthesis. The direction of Australian fine dining toward native ingredients, producer relationships, and reduced environmental impact sits as a strong current beneath the menu's surface, aligning the kitchen's ambitions with the broader ethical turn in serious Australian restaurants.

The Star Wine List recognition and La Liste scores are the primary external trust signals for a room that does not carry Michelin recognition, Australia not being part of the Michelin geographic program. In their absence, La Liste's aggregated methodology, which draws on hundreds of critical and user sources simultaneously, provides the most reliable cross-comparable benchmark for international diners assessing where Vue de Monde sits globally.

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