Boston's Inspectional Services Department closed a cafe on Newbury Street after an individual with a confirmed case of measles visited the restaurant earlier this month.

Nespresso, located at 7 Newbury St., was closed on Thursday May 12 after a notification from the Boston Public Health Commission that an individual with measles visited the cafe, the city confirmed in a statement.

"All employees of this establishment will be tested and must be cleared before returning to work," the city said.

There will be a hearing today at the Inspectional Services Department on Nespresso at 2 p.m. to determine when it can reopen.

Yesterday, public health officials sounded the alarm after a person visiting from Europe may have exposed unsuspecting Bay Staters to the virus on public buses, shopping centers and even the Pru.

The Massachusetts Department of Public Health and the Boston Public Health Commission announced the commonwealth’s first confirmed measles case of the year and warned the European visitor may have caused “potential exposures over the past week in the greater Boston area.”

Officials say people in the following areas at the following times may have been exposed.

• May 1 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.: The MBTA’s No. 1 Bus from Newbury Street to Harvard Square and J. August on Massachusetts Avenue.

• May 1 from noon to 4 p.m.: The Cambridgeside Galleria, where the visitor ate at the Panda Express in the food court and shopped at Victoria’s Secret, Gap, Abercrombie & Fitch and PacSun, before stopping at Starbucks and taking the MBTA’s Green Line back to Boston.

• May 2 from noon to 6 p.m.: The Wrentham Village Outlets, where the visitor shopped at Nike, Gap, Polo Ralph Lauren and other stores before eating at the nearby UNOs Chicago Grill.

• May 3 from 11:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.: Rockport Village, where the visitor shopped at The Pewter Shop, Sea Star Gift Shop and stopped by the Brothers’ Brew Coffee Shop.

• May 4 from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m.: Star Market at the Prudential Center and the Nespresso Boutique Bar on Newbury Street.

• May 5 to May 8: Massachusetts General Hospital.

Boston residents and exposed people who work or attend school in the city should call BPHC at 617-534-5611. Those outside Boston should contact MDPH at 617-983-6800.