Pittsburgh: Bar Marco (September 2017)



Bar Marco - Old Firehouse Provides a Backdrop for Tasty Food

My spouse and I dined at Bar Marco for brunch on a Sunday morning in late September 2017. We reserved a table via email; reservations are recommended in order to score one of the few spots. (The restaurant seats only 30+ patrons.) Bar Marco is open for dinner on Tuesdays through Saturdays, and brunch on weekends (closed Mondays). Paid parking is available in an adjacent surface lot.

Bar Marco opened in January 2012 in Pittsburgh’s Strip District. The restaurant occupies the old brick 1860s firehouse for the Number 7 Engine Company. Prior to Bar Marco, the firehouse hosted the Embury (downstairs) and the Firehouse Lounge (upstairs). Today, Bar Marco offers a private event space/art gallery called Union Hall on its second floor. Bar Marco is named after the chef’s mentor, Marco Enrico (who operates DeNunzio’s restaurants in Jeannette, Latrobe, and Monroeville). A third experience, The Wine Room, occupies the basement space.

Bar Marco’s main dining area takes a minimalist approach. Original turn-of-the-century sealed concrete floors, incredibly high ceilings that contain exposed ductwork and house a stunning chandelier, original cream-colored subway tile, cream-colored walls, and an arched front window surround tables and chairs and a small marble-topped wood bar with metal chairs. A metal counter that runs along the front window seems to have once offered additional high-top bar rail seating. Wine bottles and memorabilia and framed art lend decorative touches.

Chef Justin Steel owns and operates the restaurant along with three high school friends. He developed an interest in food during a college semester abroad in Rome, and later worked with noted Philadelphia chef Marc Vetri. Bar Marco offers an American menu that leans toward Mediterranean in some offerings. From the brunch menu, we shared a biscuit as a starter, followed by a bacon sandwich and the fried chicken. No formal dessert menu was offered at brunch, although our waiter suggested the donuts as a possibility. Wine and cocktails are available; however, the beer menu is nearly non-existent, offering only leftovers from events. Service was great, showing that Bar Marco has been able to retain its recent staff now that they discontinued tipping and began paying employees a livable wage. 

We enjoyed our brunch at Bar Marco, and we will return sometime to try their dinner menu.






Pittsburgh: Kimpton Monaco (September 2017)



My spouse and I stayed at the Kimpton Monaco Pittsburgh for two nights on a weekend in late September - early October 2017. We booked our stay online using the Kimpton website. At that time, we also signed up for the Kimpton Karma frequent stay program. (Years ago, we were members of Kimpton InTouch, but our membership either lapsed or did not transfer over to the new program.) The Kimpton brand was created in 1981, and has since opened over 65 hotels in 30 cities under the brand Kimpton or the sub-brand Palomar or Monaco. In 2014, the InterContinental Hotels Group (IHG) brand acquired Kimpton. (IHG owns the Holiday Inn, Holiday Inn Express, Crowne Plaza, Staybridge Suites, Candlewood Suites, Indigo, EVEN, and Hualuxe brands.) Our last Kimpton experience was dining at the Brabo Tasting Room at the Lorien Hotel in Alexandria, Virginia in May 2015.

The Kimpton Monaco Pittsburgh opened in January 2015 in Downtown’s 1903 Beaux-Arts James H. Reed building (which was once home to Duquesne Light as well as a law office) at the corner of William Penn Place and Sixth Avenue. The hotel building lies across the street from Mellon Square, a park that provides green space, seating, and fountains atop a city parking garage. The garage offers an excellent value for weekend parking ($6 per day), but it is more expensive during the workweek. (FYI: It is likely the same garage that the hotel valets use.) This downtown hotel occupies a good location if you plan to attend a Pittsburgh sporting or cultural event. You can walk (or ride the “T” train/subway system) to Point State Park, Fort Pitt, PNC Park, Heinz Field, Carnegie Science Center, Consol Energy Center (now called PPG Paints Arena), the David L. Lawrence Convention Center, Station Square, and the Rivers Casino. Numerous restaurants, other hotels, and stores (pharmacy, beer and liquor stores) are located within walking distance. The hotel loans bicycles if you want to explore.

As you approach the front door to be greeted by the parking valet /doormen, look for the ceramic Great Dane statue outside. (The Great Dane is the state dog of Pennsylvania, unbeknownst to me, a lifelong resident of PA and once “auntie” to two Danes, one Harlequin and one Black.) In fact, the Monaco is pet-friendly; we overheard a valet tell a guest “We allow any pet that fits through the door!” Pass through either the revolving door, or one of the two stationary doors to enter the black-and-white tile foyer crowned by an enormous chandelier and a front desk designed to look like a regular desk (with faux drawers on the customer side) and side lamps with “chicken feet” details. From the lobby, you can glimpse the living room/library upstairs (with similar chicken feet chandeliers) and a restaurant downstairs. Public areas and amenities include a fitness center and two dining options: The Commoner and the Biergarten. (We visited both restaurants; see our separate reviews.) On weekdays, the hotel also offers the Commoner Corner, where you can eat breakfast or lunch at a counter, or buy a takeaway snack or beverage from a to-go window. Wi-Fi is free to Kimpton Karma members. Conference/ event/ meeting space is also available. A social hour that offers complimentary wine, beer, and snacks is held every evening from 5:00 to 6:00 pm in the Living Room gathering space. (The young woman who hosted the wine reception on the night that we attended was friendly and gregarious, and we enjoyed conversing with her and the other guests.) Near the front desk, the hotel offers complimentary coffee in the morning and fruit-infused water around the clock.

The Monaco offers 248 rooms and 13 suites in a variety of categories. Room types include Queen (253 sq. ft.), King (333 sq. ft.), 2 Queens (347 sq. ft.), Park View King (342 sq. ft.), Park View 2 Queens (336 sq. ft.), Deluxe King (319 sq. ft.), Corner King (399 sq. ft.), Corner 2 Queens (463 sq. ft.), Spa King (448 sq. ft.), Corner Spa King (460 sq. ft.), 1-Bedroom Suite (789 sq. ft.), Luxury 1-Bedroom Suite (922 sq. ft.), and the Emperor Suite (1,008 sq. ft.). Because of some reduced rates on the weekend that we visited, we splurged on an upgraded Corner Spa King room. At 460 square feet, our room contained a long hallway with a big closet. When the closet doors swung back (they did not slide on a track), a fun wallpaper (colorful neckties interspersed with images of a Great Dane) was revealed affixed to the back of the closet. In addition to plenty of hangers, two fluffy gray bathrobes were provided (although no slippers), as well as a yoga mat, an umbrella, an electronic safe, and an extra pillow and blanket. Our bedroom featured textiles of many different patterns, colors, and textures, from the black-and-white hounds tooth curtains (which covered two sides of our room and framed a view across Grant Street to the fountain and courtyard at the USX Building), to a green tufted headboard that occupied one entire wall and surrounded both the king-size bed and a nightstand on each side), to the leather armchair (with a reddish needlepoint pillow of a Great Dane riding a scooter), and the colorful floral-patterned standing-lamp shade. Other notable décor included a yellow penguin-shaped lamp (in a nod to the city’s hockey team), a bedside chandelier ensconced in a birdcage, and a black-and-gold armoire that held the TV and the minibar. (Kimpton Karma members receive a $10 “Raid the Bar” credit for each stay. Alternatively, you can use the credit against charges in one of the hotel restaurants/bars.) As mentioned in the name of our room category, a spa bathroom was a big feature with a nice vanity (including a single sink and generous storage space), a separate room (although without a door) for the toilet, and a huge walk-in tile glass-enclosed shower area that held not only the showerhead (which was not a rainfall model) and a gorgeous free-standing soaking tub. The hotel provides Atelier Bloem toiletries (shampoo, conditioner, body wash), but in the regular large household-use size. Only the hand lotion and bath salts were in portable sizes. As most hotels, the Kimpton offers a forgotten item program; however, their offerings include less-seldom-seen items including straightening irons, phone chargers, humidifiers, adapters, lint rollers, stain-remover wipes, and anti-static spray. The handwritten (although not personalized) notes from housekeeping upon arrival and at turndown added a homey touch. We also appreciated the various emails that we received prior to our stay informing us of hotel amenities, offering a (paid) upgrade, and warning us of a local event that might affect traffic on the street in front of the hotel. (However, what we really needed was an email warning us that the last segment of the “Parkway” (Route 376 East) would be closed that weekend, necessitating an exit at Wilkinsburg and travel through Shadyside and the University/Hospital area, a detour that took approximately one hour to travel what should have been less than four miles!)

We loved our stay at the Kimpton Monaco Pittsburgh, and we hope to return soon!