Bar in New York City, United States
Place des Fêtes
100ptsFrench-leaning Clinton Hill bar, groups welcome.

About Place des Fêtes
Place des Fêtes is a French-inflected bar and dining room in Clinton Hill, Brooklyn, suited to groups of four or more who want more atmosphere than a generic gastropub without committing to a full tasting-menu night. Booking is easy, mid-week evenings are the best version of the room, and it's a reasonable neighbourhood anchor for a relaxed group dinner or drinks-led evening.
Should you book Place des Fêtes for a group night out in Brooklyn?
Yes, with caveats. Place des Fêtes on Greene Ave in Clinton Hill is a French-inflected bar and dining room that works well for groups of four or more who want something with more character than a generic Brooklyn gastropub, but aren't looking for a full tasting-menu commitment. If you've been once and enjoyed it, the case for a repeat visit is strongest on a weekday evening, when the room is easier to settle into and the pacing feels more relaxed.
The Room and the Vibe
Visually, Place des Fêtes draws on the French fête tradition — festive, warm, a little theatrical without being precious. The room is designed for lingering, which makes it well-suited to groups who want to order in rounds rather than rush through a meal. For a returning visitor, this is the kind of place where you notice the details more on a second visit: the light, the layout, how the bar anchors the space. It's not a quiet date-night retreat, and it's not a loud sports bar. It sits deliberately in between, which is either exactly what you want or a reason to look elsewhere.
Leading Time to Visit
Weekday evenings, particularly Tuesday through Thursday, give you the leading version of this bar. Weekend nights in Clinton Hill fill up fast across the board, and the more intimate qualities of a room like this get diluted when it's at capacity. If you're coordinating a group of four to six, arriving early — before 7:30 PM , gives you a better shot at a table without the wait. The neighbourhood itself is worth factoring in: Clinton Hill is quieter than Williamsburg or the Lower East Side, so the crowd here tends to skew local and slightly older, which keeps the energy social rather than chaotic.
Group Suitability
For groups, Place des Fêtes is a reasonable call. The format , bar plus dining room, French-leaning menu, cocktail program , gives a table of four or more enough options to keep everyone engaged. It's not a private-room venue, so large parties of eight or more should call ahead and confirm what's available. For a group looking to share plates, keep things loose, and not spend a fortune, this is a more textured option than most of what Clinton Hill has to offer at a comparable price point. If your group prioritises a tighter cocktail focus over food, Amor y Amargo in the East Village is worth the subway ride for a more deliberately curated drinks experience.
Booking
Booking difficulty is rated Easy. This is not a venue where you need to plan weeks in advance, though weekend evenings warrant a reservation if you're coming as a group. Walk-ins are more viable mid-week. Check the venue directly for current hours and reservation options, as phone and online booking details are not confirmed in our database at this time.
Quick reference: Clinton Hill, Brooklyn , group-friendly, easy to book, leading mid-week.
How It Compares
Frequently Asked Questions
- What's the signature drink at Place des Fêtes? Specific cocktail names aren't confirmed in our data. What the venue's French-inflected identity suggests is a program oriented around classic European spirits and approachable cocktails rather than avant-garde technique. If you've been before and had something you liked, ask the bartender to riff on it , that's a reliable approach at bars in this neighbourhood tier.
- Does Place des Fêtes have happy hour deals? Happy hour details aren't confirmed in our database. Worth checking directly with the venue before you visit, especially if price is a factor. For a bar in Clinton Hill at this positioning, happy hour offers are common but not guaranteed.
- What's the crowd like at Place des Fêtes? Expect a local Clinton Hill crowd , mostly Brooklyn residents, slightly older than the Williamsburg bar scene, social without being loud. It draws people who want a drink and a meal rather than a night of bar-hopping. On weekends it gets busier, but it doesn't attract the same volume of out-of-neighbourhood traffic as bars closer to the L train corridor.
- Is the food good at Place des Fêtes? We don't have award data or independent ratings confirmed for this venue, so a strong verdict on food quality would be unsupported. The French-influenced positioning suggests a menu built around bistro-adjacent dishes rather than elaborate tasting formats. If food quality is your primary criterion for a Brooklyn bar, venues with documented critical recognition , like those listed in our full New York City restaurants guide , give you more certainty.
- Is Place des Fêtes good for a date? It can work for a second or third date, particularly earlier in the evening when the room is quieter and conversation is easier. It's a more considered choice than a generic wine bar, and the French-inflected atmosphere gives it enough personality without feeling try-hard. For a first date where you want a stronger fallback option, Angel's Share in the East Village offers a quieter, more intimate environment with a well-documented cocktail program.
- Is Place des Fêtes good for groups? Yes, for groups of four to six. The bar-plus-dining-room format gives larger tables enough space and menu range to keep things moving. Groups of eight or more should call ahead. If your group is cocktail-focused and wants a more specialist experience, Attaboy NYC or Superbueno are stronger calls for drinks-led group visits.
- Do I need a reservation at Place des Fêtes? Booking difficulty is Easy, so you're unlikely to be turned away, but a reservation is advisable for groups of four or more on Friday or Saturday evenings. Mid-week walk-ins are generally fine. Phone and website details aren't confirmed in our database , check Google or the venue's social channels for current booking info. For broader context on what's bookable across the city right now, see our full New York City bars guide.
Compare Place des Fêtes
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Place des Fêtes | — | |
| The Long Island Bar | — | |
| Dirty French | — | |
| Superbueno | — | |
| Amor y Amargo | — | |
| Angel's Share | — |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the signature drink at Place des Fêtes?
Specific menu details are not confirmed in our data, but the bar program at Place des Fêtes on Greene Ave runs French-leaning, with cocktails that fit the festive, warm tone of the room. Ask the bartender what's rotating — that tends to be where the care shows at bars in this format. For a bar with a deeper craft cocktail focus in the same borough, Amor y Amargo is the more specialist call.
Does Place des Fêtes have happy hour deals?
No confirmed happy hour details are on record for Place des Fêtes at 212 Greene Ave. Weekday evenings, particularly Tuesday through Thursday, are the lower-pressure window here — less crowded, more attentive service — which is a practical alternative to a formal happy hour if you're watching spend.
What's the crowd like at Place des Fêtes?
Clinton Hill regulars, creative-industry locals, and groups looking for a French-influenced room without the Williamsburg premium. The room is designed for lingering rather than quick turnover, so the crowd skews toward people who are there for the evening rather than a drink and out. Weekends pull in a wider Brooklyn mix; weeknights feel more neighborhood.
Is the food good at Place des Fêtes?
The format is French-inflected bar and dining room on Greene Ave, designed to hold a table across drinks and a meal rather than as a destination restaurant in isolation. No awards or critical credentials are on record, so this is not the booking to make if serious cooking is the primary reason. For that tier in Brooklyn, the bar is higher elsewhere. Treat the food here as solid context for a good night out, not the headline act.
Is Place des Fêtes good for a date?
Yes, in the right conditions. The room is warm and theatrical without being precious, which gives a first or second date enough atmosphere to work with. Weekday evenings — Tuesday to Thursday — are the call: lower volume, easier conversation, and you're not competing with a packed weekend crowd for service. Avoid Friday and Saturday if an intimate tone matters to you.
Is Place des Fêtes good for groups?
Yes, and this is probably its strongest use case. The bar-plus-dining-room format at 212 Greene Ave gives a table of four or more enough structure to move through cocktails, food, and a long evening without the night stalling. Booking is rated Easy, so organising a group here does not require the kind of advance planning you'd need for a tighter reservation at somewhere like Dirty French. Keep the group to a size that fits a table rather than splitting across the room.
Do I need a reservation at Place des Fêtes?
Booking difficulty is rated Easy, so this is not a venue that demands weeks of advance planning. That said, weekend evenings in Clinton Hill fill across the board, and a reservation keeps your group from waiting. For a weeknight visit of two, walk-in is a reasonable call. For four or more on a Friday or Saturday, book ahead.
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