Lawrence’s Greatest Tables
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715
715 occupies a heritage stone-walled building at 715 Massachusetts Street in the heart of downtown Lawrence — a five-minute walk from the University of Kansas campus on a working Big Twelve weekend and the most photographed dining-room address on the city's signature Mass Street walking grid — and has held the seat as Lawrence's reference fine-dining house since opening in 2009. The dining room runs about ninety covers across a single long parlor with original stone walls salvaged from the building's nineteenth-century retail origins, shiny black tables, sleek wooden chairs, a fully-equipped bar at the front of the house that pours craft beers and a careful global wine card, and a small open pasta-station that anchors the back of the house. Executive Chef Kelly Conwell — a Kansas City fine-dining pastry chef before taking the kitchen at 715 — runs the European-style neighborhood-Italian programme as the city's standing fine-dining credential.
J. Wilson's
J. Wilson's occupies a free-standing building at 4821 West Sixth Street, Suite A in West Lawrence — a ten-minute drive from the seven-hundred block of Massachusetts Street and a working business-corridor address that draws from both the downtown set and the western Big-Twelve-campus residential ring — and has held the seat as the city's reference chef-owner seasonal-American room since opening in 2016. The dining room runs about seventy covers across a single bright parlor with a working open kitchen at the back of the house, a careful low-light scheme, a seasonal outdoor patio that adds about thirty covers on summer evenings, and a small bar at the front of the house that pours craft beers and a careful by-the-glass wine programme. The format reads as a deliberate departure from the Mass Street downtown grid — a real chef-owner room with a working seasonal card, opened by a chef who set out to give Lawrence a New American credential the campus chains could not match.
Mass Street Fish House & Raw Bar
Mass Street Fish House & Raw Bar occupies a heritage brick storefront at 719 Massachusetts Street in downtown Lawrence — four doors down from 715 in the seven-hundred block and a four-block walk from the working University of Kansas campus — and has held the seat as the city's reference coastal-oyster house since opening in 2017. The dining room runs about a hundred covers across a long bright parlor with exposed brick along the long wall, a working raw-bar at the front of the house with the oyster programme on visible display, an open kitchen behind a glass pass at the rear, and a careful nautical-modern palette that reads as a coastal-oyster-house format transplanted to the working prairie-river-city map. The conversion brought a deliberate signal-of-place — the room reads as a working New England-or-Pacific-Northwest oyster bar landed in landlocked Kansas, which is a credential the city had never previously held.
Culinaria Mediterranean Kitchen
Culinaria Mediterranean Kitchen occupies one of East Lawrence's most historic buildings at 512 East Ninth Street, Suite A — on the northwest corner of Ninth and New Jersey, a five-block walk from the seven-hundred block of Massachusetts Street and an easy approach from any downtown hotel — and has held the seat as the city's reference East-Lawrence small-plates room since opening as a brick-and-mortar restaurant in autumn 2017. The building itself was originally constructed for the Kansas Cavalry after William Quantrill's August 1863 raid on Lawrence — the building's working nineteenth-century military-stable architecture is preserved through the original exposed-brick walls, the heavy-timber ceiling beams and a careful courtyard-and-patio programme that opens through the warm-weather months. The dining room runs about sixty covers across a single careful parlor with original brick along three walls, a working open kitchen behind a glass pass at the rear, and a low-light scheme that reads as a working eastern-Mediterranean meyhane rather than a Kansas-college-town chain.
Limestone Pizza Kitchen Bar
Limestone Pizza Kitchen Bar occupies a heritage two-story building at 814 Massachusetts Street in the heart of Lawrence's Downtown Historic District — a block from 715 across the seven-and-eight-hundred-block Mass Street walking grid and a five-minute walk from the working University of Kansas campus — and has held the seat as the city's reference downtown Neapolitan-pizza house since opening. The dining room runs about ninety covers across a long two-story parlor with original brick along the long wall, a working wood-fired pizza-oven at the back of the room that anchors the kitchen, a careful craft-beer-and-wine bar at the front of the house, and a heritage Lawrence-downtown-historic-district atmosphere that reads as a working Massachusetts Street institution rather than a chain pizzeria. The conversion preserved the building's original two-story scale and the careful brick-and-timber palette runs through every corner of the room.