There is a particular kind of thrill that comes from walking into a room and feeling, immediately and unmistakably, that the building knows things you don’t. Cole’s Pacific Electric Buffet, tucked beneath the ornate red brick of the Pacific Electric Building on East 6th Street in Downtown Los Angeles, delivers exactly that sensation the moment you push through its heavy front door.
Opened in 1908, Cole’s holds the proud — and genuinely contested — claim of being Los Angeles’ oldest bar and restaurant, as well as one of the originators of the French Dip sandwich. Whether you land on the side that believes Cole’s invented the thing, or whether you’re a loyalist to the rival claim across town, the sandwich itself will make the argument feel beside the point. The beef is slow-roasted, hand-carved right at the counter, and tucked into a soft French roll that gets dunked — or not, your call — into a rich, deeply savory au jus. It is the kind of food that feels earned rather than assembled.
The room itself is the real showstopper. Dark mahogany, pressed tin ceilings, old pendant lights casting everything in amber: this is not a reconstruction or a theme. These bones are original. The long bar runs the length of the space, and behind it, bartenders move with the easy confidence of people who know their craft. The cocktail program leans classic and well-executed — a proper Manhattan here is a serious thing, and their whiskey selection is extensive without being exhausting.
Tucked behind a secret door at the back is The Varnish, a cocktail bar that Cole’s shares in partnership, and it has earned its reputation as one of the finest cocktail rooms in the country. Low lighting, jazz on the speakers, and bartenders who take the time to ask what you’re in the mood for before making a recommendation — it operates like a private club for anyone willing to find the door.
Cole’s sits right in the heart of Downtown LA, a short walk from Little Tokyo, the Arts District, and the Grand Park corridor. It is the kind of place that rewards a slow Tuesday night just as generously as a lively weekend. Come for an early dinner, claim a spot at the bar, order the French Dip and a strong drink, and let the room do its work on you.
In a city that tends to tear things down and build something shinier in their place, Cole’s endures — not as a relic, but as a living, breathing piece of Los Angeles history that still has every reason to be your favorite spot in town.