The Tin Building by Jean-Georges has lost Jean-Georges – abruptly ending Manhattan’s most ambitious food market and restaurant complex.
The multi-level gourmet emporium from superchef Jean-Georges Vongerichten at the South Street Seaport will be replaced by Lux Entertainment’s Balloon Museum, an Italian-owned “contemporary art format,” according to landlord Seaport Entertainment Group.
“The current food and beverage operations at the Tin Building will close immediately,” SEG said in a terse statement.
It spells a premature end to Vongerichten’s 58,000-square-foot emporium after less than four years. It was widely hailed after SEG’s predecessor company, Howard Hughes Corp., spent 10 years to relocate and $194 million to restore the landmarked building under the watchful eye of city, state and federal agencies.
Vongerichten’s CEO, Lois Freedman, told The Post that the Tin Building’s most popular eateries such as House of the Red Pearl and T. Brasserie might be relocated to other parts of the Seaport. However, the plans are still “under discussion,” she said.
The market sold high-quality goods from around the world branded as “Tin Building” products. But it struggled in a market over-saturated with fancy foods and at a location many New Yorkers regard as remote.
SEG reported last year it lost $33 million on its share of the Tin Building. SEG, like HHC before it, holds a 25% stake in Vongerichten’s company. Bill Ackman is the largest shareholder both of SEG and of HHC, which spun off SEG in 2024.
The losses prompted SEG to sever Vongerichten’s Creative Culinary Management Company from its Tin Building operating role last year and to replace it with a licensing agreement.
“We are proud of what we created at the Tin. Seaport Entertainment is moving in a different direction, restructuring and leaning more towards entertainment,” Freedman said.
“The Balloon Museum will bring a lot of foot traffic to a low-density location and be a great addition to the area,” she graciously added.
The museum debuted in Rome in 2021 and has presented exhibitions in 23 cities in Europe, North America and Asia, welcoming more than 7 million visitors.
Its website calls the site “a journey among out-of-scale installations with unexpected shapes in which interaction with the viewer is placed at the center of the experience.”









