Home Tiki Bars
Sukielau's Lanai Lava Lounge
Belle Isle, Florida, United States
Sukilau's Lanai Lava Lounge is the home tiki bar of Bethany and Chris Jenkins in Belle Isle, Florida, south of Orlando. They created the bar in the backyard of their home in June 2016, in a screened-in patio near their swimming pool. The bar is named after their rescue pup, Sukie, who has been a regular at Florida's annual The Hukilau tiki gathering. The couple are cast members at Walt Disney World, and have drawn inspiration from The Enchanted Tiki Room, with some nautical elements as well. The screen "walls" have been concealed with bamboo blinds, blocking out the outside world to create an immersive environment. With the swimming pool just steps from the door, it is the perfect place to mix cocktails while lounging around all day. The bar has become an extension of the house, and because of the warm Florida weather they use the space year round.
The Hali Tiki Room
Nova Scotia, Canada
The Hali Tiki Room is a home tiki bar in Halifax, Nova Scotia, created in September 2017. Its focus is rum, and hospitality: it is always open and everyone is always welcome, and with some advance notice, a Mai Tai will be waiting for you.
Tina's Tiki Hut
Mountlake Terrace, Washington, United States
Tina's Tiki Hut is the home tiki bar of Tina Schafer in Mountlake Terrace, north of Seattle, Washington. She created the space in the family room of her home in July 2017. Her interest in things Hawaiian began with a trip there in the early 1970s, and she now enjoys the themed decor of tiki bars, and the well-crafted drinks. She and her husband listen to Hawaiian music in the space and enjoy the vintage finds she's collected over the years, most especially a dancing hula lamp she purchased on the Big Island.
Mahu Nui Loa
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Mahu Nui Loa is the home tiki bar of artists Joe Witkowski and Bruce Paul Reik in Baltimore, Maryland. They built the bar in the dining room of their home (known as Bratteigh Manor) in August 2017. The name of the bar is Hawaiian, and roughly means "very big and gay." Inspiration for their home bar came from their wedding on a beach on Kauai at sunset in March 2014, and their visits to tiki bars all over the world.
The anchor of the room is a 1950s two-seat bar set with rattan and salmon-colored vinyl they found in St. Louis, Missouri. The room's built-in china cabinet has been electrified and fitted with lauhala matting, special lighting, sea shells and netting, post cards, tiki mugs, tikis, and small mementos of the pair's travels including Bali, Fiji, Australia, and more. The room is encrusted with hundreds of "poinsettia" Christmas lights, acquired from a Woolworth in Miami that went out of business just after Christmas in 1993. The ceiling is illuminated with a woven net of green lights, inspired by the many Indian restaurants on 6th Street in the East Village of New York City. 1960s pierced, electrified ceramic pendants hang over the bar, and a Balinese Garuda figure perches above the cabinet. The room also displays a wall of carnival chalkware figures, vintage tube radios, Japanese souvenir boxes, and more. The walls are hand-painted in a reimagined version of the room's original botanical wallpaper pattern.
Mea Huna Oasis
Indianapolis, Indiana, United States
Mea Huna Oasis is the home tiki bar of Eric Bogan in Indianapolis, Indiana. He created it in the basement of his home in January 2017. The wet bar has between 100 and 150 bottles on hand, and is decorated with over 100 tiki mugs collected during Eric's tiki travels. He uses the space to host tikiphiles and provide some aloha spirit during Indianapolis' "dreadful" winters.
Trader Phil's
Corona, California, United States
Trader Phil's is the home tiki bar of Phil and Andrea Godbold in Corona, California. They created the bar in a bonus room of their Southern California home in May 2016. The walls and bar are covered in bamboo, and a hidden door leads to a bathroom. They love to entertain and perfect their drink-making in the bar, and their dream is to someday open a tiki bar in Riverside County.
The Manini Bar
Kihei, Hawaii, United States
The Manini Bar is the home tiki bar of Scott Taylor (a.k.a. Tikipop, Beachbumz) in Kihei on the island of Maui. Scott owns Beachbumz Tiki & Gift Shop nearby in Kihei, where he sells tiki mugs and other tourist-friendly items. The bar was created on the covered lanai on the side of their house in March 2014. "Manini" means small in Hawaiianthis teeny bar seats only three people comfortably, four if they squeeze in. The bar was mainly built to house Scott's growing rum collection, but it has become a gathering spot for friends visiting from the mainland in search of a good Mai Tai. The bar has shelves, lights, and sounds, to give it a vintage tiki feel, and vintage-inspired tapa fabric in the bar top.
The Mermaid Lounge
Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States
The Mermaid Lounge is the home tiki bar of Joe in Minneapolis, Minnesota. He created the bar on the front porch of his home in March 2012. The lounge is operational from late spring to early fall, but in the winter months the decor moves indoors. The name comes from Joe's fascination with mystical merfolk. It began with one tiki mug and a sign found in a second hand store that said "The Mermaid Lounge," to which he added the atmospheric music of Exotica and Hawaiian albums. As his collection of mugs, signs and other small items has grown, he's found further inspiration from nearby Psycho Suzi's Motor Lounge, tiki books, and locations in Critiki. Joe uses the space for entertaining family and friends, and plans to continue to grow and expand the collection and the space.
Lo Cay Tiki Bar
Gainesville, Florida, United States
Lo Cay Tiki Bar is the home tiki bar of Tim (ChromeTiki) and Danielle in Gainesville, Florida. They built the bar on their screened lanai in August 2012. The bar's name is pronounced the Caribbean way, "low key." The small bar seats up to five people, and overlooks their tropically landscaped backyard. The bar's design was inspired by well-known Polynesian-themed bars, but also by the couple's frequent travel to the Caribbean. The bar top is a ceramic mosaic of sea turtles. The couple have their collection of ephemera on display attached to the wooden surfaces of the bar, including postcards from tropical locales, labels from the liquor bottles consumed on the premises, and other items collected from their travels. Also on display is a rotating selection of paintings by ChromeTiki. The couple entertains in the bar, and also uses it as a place to hang out in the evening after the summer thunderstorms have cooled things off.
The Dancing Banana
Egg Harbor City, New Jersey, United States
The Dancing Banana is the home tiki bar of Melissa in Egg Harbor City, New Jersey, near Atlantic City. She built the tiki bar in August 2004, taking over the entire basement of her home. She came up with the idea after trying to find tiki bars one lost weekend in Cape Cod. The bar's colors are oxblood red, apple green and gold, and one full wall is wallpapered with a beach scene backdrop, ideal for picture-taking. The bar itself is built out of recycled wood sourced from the rest of the house, including an old hand rail used for a foot rail, with bamboo bar stools. A door has been hand-painted as the Tiki God of Anger, and the support posts in the room have been turned into palm trees. There are beaded doorways and walls and bamboo floor covering. The room is decorated with tikis and signs from her travels.
The Boom Boom Tiki Room
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
The Boom Boom Tiki Room is the home tiki bar of Ronald Kerr in Winnipeg, Manitoba. He built the bar in the garage of his home in February 2012. Ron has a lot of musical friends who come over, leading to a lot of "boom boom"s. He has drawn inspiration from the tiki bars of the past, most especially Winnipeg's The Beachcomber. His spacious bar has been used for hosting parties and fundraiser events, and the bar has made multiple appearances in the media.
The Port Light
Oakland, California, United States
The Port Light is the home tiki bar of Jeff and Amanda in Oakland, California. They built the bar in the living room of their home in the hills of Oakland in April 2017. The name is a nod to the classic bourbon-based tiki drink, a drink the couple loves. They have added an eight-foot-long bar with sink and under-counter fridge and freezer to the room. There are several Bosko carvings, and numerous mugs and bottles of rum on display. Inspiration for the decor came from tiki bars the couple has visited, especially nearby Smuggler's Cove and Longitude. The room is used as their living room (sans television, as they feel it wouldn't fit the theme), and the bar is used for making drinks for themselves or when they're entertaining.