Tucked just inside the entrance of the acclaimed restaurant, this sleek and dimly lit lounge offers an intimate escape from the Central bustle. Here, mixology meets la dolce vita with a programme that weaves history into every recipe. Expect forgotten spirits, rare Italian bitters and ingredients rooted in tradition, all crafted into cocktails that riff on the classics without losing their soul. Whether you’re here for a pre-dinner aperitivo or a nightcap with flair, the service is seamless, the Negronis are authoritative, and the ambience remains effortlessly chic.
Please note that 8½ Otto e Mezzo Bombana in Hong Kong is temporarily closed for renovation
Argo
Argo

Inside the Four Seasons, Argo channels the spirit of discovery with its globe-trotting cocktail programme and soaring, botanical-inspired space. The recently launched ‘Exploration’ menu splits into two compelling chapters: ‘Local Encounters’ sees the team collaborate with Hong Kong artisans, from tattoo studios to cha chaan tengs, while ‘Seasonal Journeys’ roots itself in terroir-driven ingredients like sweet potato and pickled greens. Even the bar bites, crispy soft-shell crab rolls and eggette waffles keep pace with the ambition. All the while, floor-to-ceiling windows frame the harbour in perpetually changing light.
Bar De Luxe
Bar De Luxe

Tucked inside Central’s H Code, Bar De Luxe brings the philosophy of Bar High Five to Hong Kong through Ueno’s protégés—first his chief disciple Yuriko Naganuma, now homegrown talent Ivin Hui. The space itself is a study in considered calm: warm lighting, soothing music, comfortable sofas and bar tables that encourage lingering. Cocktails arrive with the quiet complexity that defines the Japanese style. The Evening Cool offers effortless refreshment, while signatures like Hokkaido and Yuzu’s Reply showcase seasonal ingredients handled with restraint. Service is intuitive with staff happy to guide without hovering, and free-flow snacks appear without asking, a small courtesy that makes the room feel genuinely welcoming.
Bar Leone
Bar Leone

Bar Leone runs on a beautifully simple idea: cocktail popolari or drinks made for people, not presentations. The room glows warm with mahogany accents, burnt orange banquettes, walls papered with Italian cinema idols and AS Roma memorabilia. The Olive Oil Sour arrives velvety and unexpected, a whisper of nutmeg drifting up as you sip. Seasonal Negronis wander wherever the fruit leads: fig in autumn, blood orange when the timing’s right. Order the smoked olives and mortadella sandwich, or be prepared to get food envy when the other table does.
Caprice Bar
Caprice Bar

The cocktail programme at Caprice Bar pays homage to the regions of France and their produce. Water infuses oyster leaf into elderflower liqueur, capturing marine freshness without a drop of seafood; La Banane layers Hennessy VSOP with roasted anise; It’s Thyme sends mezcal and kombucha into unexpected conversation. Caprice’s famously extensive wine list is also yours to explore. The room stays low and quiet, with only six seats at the marble counter and a handful of lounge sofas beyond.
Coa
Coa

The space feels like a Mexican cantina dreamed by someone who actually loves Mexico: reclaimed wood, warm brick, a hand-carved coa blade embedded in the wall, and a mural of Mayahuel, the Aztec goddess who gave the agave plant to the world. The Bloody Beef Maria brings savoury depth with umami-rich tomato and beef consommé, while Smacked Cucumber offers cooling brightness, and the Pepper Smash arrives alive with shishito and Thai chilli. Behind the bar, over 200 bottles of agave spirits wait for the curious with names you’ll learn to love by last call. The atmosphere is relaxed, the service knowledgeable, and the whole operation runs on the quiet confidence that comes from knowing exactly what you’re good at.
Darkside
Darkside

The Diplomat
The Diplomat

Tucked just below H Code, this 18-seat room channels Edward Hopper’s Nighthawks through curved glass windows, matte gold trim and brown leather banquettes. The space unfolds in two acts: the main bar hums with classic American tavern energy while a pink corridor leads to the Social Club, where vinyl spins and the seating turns darker, more intimate. The Tarling layers pandan gin with clarified orange and coconut, while mini Martinis arrive perfectly chilled as both a welcome and palate cleanser. The kitchen matches the ambition with what many call the city’s best burger.
Gokan
Gokan

Housed in the site of Hong Kong’s first icehouse, this Japanese-inspired lounge wraps low ceilings and warm wood around a deceptively simple philosophy: cocktails organised by the five tastes (sweet, sour, spicy, bitter, savoury), each available in three formats (highball, rocks, straight up). The result is a choose-your-own-adventure menu where curiosity pays off. Cocktails such as Watermelon Koffeezz, which clarifies gin with light-roast coffee and watermelon into something improbably refreshing, while the Figaroni twists a Negroni with fig leaf and pomegranate vinegar, all bitter and elegant.
The Green Door
The Green Door

This subterranean hideaway channels Alice’s rabbit hole through curved arches, cavernous lighting and leather banquettes that swallow you whole. The menu organises drinks by alcohol content with cocktails numbered one through nine, so you know exactly how far down the rabbit hole you're venturing. Tropical Julias, inventive Dominicanas, and creations with feminine names (Emelia, Jennifer, Jenny) arrive with personality baked in. Another draw is the American pie: a three-day labour of love, baked fresh daily and served warm with ice cream and flowing caramel. Staff treat you like friends, the playlist keeps heads nodding, and the whole operation runs on the sort of magic that makes guests fall so hard.
Kinsman
Kinsman

Co-founder Gavin Yeung leads a mission to revive the indigenous Chinese liqueurs and wines that once defined the region’s drinking culture, from black glutinous rice wine to papaya wine and jiuniang. Most recently, the cocktail menu was inspired by five historic Chinatowns from Singapore to Lima, each drink telling a story of diaspora and adaptation, much like the Cantonese spirits themselves. Cantopop from the 1960s and 80s plays softly—Leslie Cheung, Danny Chan—and the whole room glows with mid-century warmth. It’s drinking as cultural preservation, and it’s never tasted better.
Mius
Mius

The space itself sets the tone: light wood tones, soft curves, metal details and high ceilings that flood the room with natural light by day and glow with intimacy by night. Behind the bar, Tai serves a philosophy she calls “simple things, done right”. The cocktail menu reflects that with approachable modern classics built on balance. The Matcha Mori layers warm whisky against savoury vanilla cream, and the Strawberry Negroni walks the line between bitter and jammy sweetness. Every drink feels intuitive, the kind you order by instinct rather than instruction.
Founded by Masahiko Endo, one of Japan’s great bartending masters, Mizunara now runs under Italian head bartender Massimo Petovello, who learned the Japanese way directly from Endo himself. The space channels Ginza through dark wood imported from Japan, plush leather seating, and an outdoor garden furnished with barrels from Suntory. Behind the bar, over 700 bottles line the walls—Japanese, Scotch, Taiwanese, American—alongside a curated selection of shochu and sake. Drinks are built from scratch before your eyes with hand-cut ice catching the low light. Classic cocktails, signatures and bespoke creations are all executed with the patience of artisans who measure success in return visits, not speed.
Montana
Montana

The space channels the spirit of Mac’s Club Deuce, a legendary Miami dive, through warm neon, vintage Cuban details, and an energy that spills onto the street the moment the door opens. There’s no pretension here, just Latin funk, Abba, and the kind of joy that makes strangers grin at each other. The cocktail programme highlights Cuba’s golden age: the Montana Daiquiri faithfully recreates a 1930s recipe from the Club de Cantineros handbook, served in a delicate flower-shaped glass. The El Presidente spends time ageing in a dulce de leche jar, emerging with a velvety, gently sweet complexity. The kitchen matches the warmth with Cubano sliders and a BBQ pineapple with spiced rum. It's loud, it's loose, and it’s exactly what drinking should feel like.
The Old Man
The Old Man

The entrance is easy to miss, with just a staircase leading down from the pavement. No sign, no fanfare. Push through the door, and you’re in an intimate space where a central communal table encourages strangers to become friends and the open kitchen-style bar puts the theatre of mixology front and centre. A striking abstract mural of Hemingway himself watches over the room. A handful of intimate corners are there for quieter conversations. The cocktail programme evolves with each new menu, digging deeper into the writer's world without ever feeling academic. Drinks arrive with stories attached, explained by bartenders who treat every pour as a performance and every guest as a friend.
The Opposites
The Opposites

Antonio Lai, the veteran innovator, works one end of the bar with laboratory precision: spherification, smoking guns, theatrical foams, flavours that arrive in clouds and bubbles and unexpected forms. Samuel Kwok commands the other side with elegance and restraint: pristine glassware, adventurous combinations, balance so quiet you almost miss the craft behind it. The concept is simple: sixteen cocktails, eight classic templates, each reimagined twice. A Pisco Sour becomes Lai’s Scoop Me Up with pink guava white tea foam and a smoke bubble that releases pineapple; Kwok’s House of Saints reworks the Vieux Carré into something adventurous that still honours the original. The room mirrors the contrast: smoky amber on one side, cool blue on the other.
Penicillin
Penicillin

The room feels like a mad scientist’s apothecary: white tiles, fermentation vessels glowing behind glass and fruit rinds pickled and waiting their turn. The Original is savoury salvation, with waste shell vodka, spiced cherry tomato and salted coconut cordial, that tastes like medicine in the best possible way. Hot, Flat & Crowded shouldn’t work: mango-curd gin, salted burnt butter and grilled purple cabbage cream soda, but somehow lands in perfect balance. The team moves with surgical precision, happy to explain the fermentation room or the upcycling, resulting in a bar where the mission statement actually improves the drink.
Quinary
Quinary

The room hasn’t aged a day: sleek industrial lines, a long illuminated bar and an open laboratory where rotary evaporators and centrifuges gleam behind glass. The multisensory approach that made the bar famous remains fully intact. Drinks arrive with foam, caviar pearls, smoke, and unexpected textures, each element serving up intriguing flavours. The popular Earl Grey Caviar Martini is still the one that converts first-timers, while newer creations like Glass and Gent’s O’Clock prove the team hasn't stopped experimenting.
The room wraps around a hexagonal bar that dissolves the distance between maker and drinker, all warm timber and stone, intimate without trying. Here, cocktails arrive tasting like dishes you’d order at a restaurant: Thai Beef Salad clarifies rum with beef essence, coconut and makrut lime into something that shouldn’t work but absolutely does, and the Biryani layers ghee and masala with tequila. Even the non-alcoholic menu gets the same obsessive attention—fermented juices, house-made shrubs, nothing poured from a can. Service is the kind that sends shots to those celebrating, and refills water or crisps without you ever asking.
Sugar King
Sugar King

The space embraces its limitations with charm: a few outdoor benches, indoor standing only, music loud enough to feel like a Cuban bodeguita but not so loud you can’t talk. The Daiquiri reigns supreme in every conceivable variation—coffee-spiked, savoury, tropical—each one is a masterclass in balance. Order it with the crème brûlée. The combination of caramelised sugar and lime-kissed rum creates a feedback loop you won’t be able to break. It’s casual and crowded, but we wouldn’t have it any other way.






