Tiki Bars
Nalu Hawaiian Surf Bar & Grille - Dewey Beach
Dewey Beach, Delaware, United States
Nalu Hawaiian Surf Bar & Grille was opened in Dewey Beach, DE on April 24th, 2008 by Regan & Kim Derrickson.
Nalu is an open air family restaurant with a "Pacific island fusion cuisine".
The interior features several artificial palm trees and tiki poles that hold up both the thatched bar roof and that extend from floor to ceiling in the main area.
There is an outside patio and a live music stage area as well.
They have a food menu ranging from tacos to pad thai. Their drinks menu has an island style "Tonga Mai Tai" and an assortment of house tropical cocktails (that use Captain Morgan Spiced rum quite a bit) as well as frozen slushie drinks.
Nalu opened a second location in the adjacent town of Rehoboth Beach on April 9th, 2019.
Belles Beach House
Venice, California, United States
Opened October 19th, 2021, at the site of the former Larry's gastropub.
Belles comes from the Wish You Were Here dining group, the group behind the Eveleigh in Sunset Strip, Kassi Club (which closed and resurfaced in Las Vegas’s Virgin Hotels), and the Elephanté in Santa Monica.
The interior gives the feeling of being at a Hawaiian resort, bright and airy with high open ceilings, lots of bamboo and natural materials, and intimate clusters of couches and coffee tables for lounging in small groups. There is a large tiki carving and giant clamshell in front as you come in. The bar has several unique looking ceramic pendant lights with the appearance of large tiki mugs.
Not a lot of densely layered art or bric-a-brac like traditional dark-interiored tiki bars, but clean and upscale in appearance with a few signature pieces on each wall.
Belles focuses on Hawaiian izakaya (snacky bites) but also has a selection of sushi and main dishes as well. Their cocktail list has many traditional cocktails (margaritas, mules, old-fashioneds) and there is a house mai-tai, but they are not trying to offer a menu of traditional tiki cocktails. Other than the mai-tai, the other drinks with Hawaiian or tropical influences are frozen slushie drinks.
There is also a large outdoor patio space.
Shanghai Lil's
Chicago, Illinois, United States (Closed)
Opened circa 1968. This Polynesian Restaurant was owned by E. Robert (Bobby) Baer.
They had a brilliantly plumaged macaw that greeted guests -- named Judy Garland.
Shanghai Lil's was named after the famous location in Shanghai that was a gathering for the diplomat corps and other international travelers.
This locale is best remembered for its live entertainment, including The Royal Hawaiians and their hula review.
Every Sunday had a luau feast.
They did serve tiki cocktails in tiki mugs. However, their ashtrays with signature wahine logo are probably more numerous out in the wild.
It closed about 1981. The property was razed no later than 1990 and the site now houses condos.
Fort Nelson Hotel & Tiki Lounge
Fort Nelson, British Columbia, Canada
First established in 1946, the hotel was remodeled and a two story addition added in 1952.
The hotel has a large indoor open pool area and lounge with several tikis.
One tiki with spear, appears to be originally from a Steve Crane Kon-Tiki location.
Waiakea Resort Village and Marketplace
Hilo, Hawaii, United States (Closed)
C. Brewer and Co., a major sugar company, opened the Waiakea Resort Village and Marketplace in Hilo in 1972, part of a massive expansion that included a restaurant in Kau, the Volcano House hotel (built in 1961) and a golf course and residential units at Punaluu.
The Waiakea Resort Village was meant to resemble a pre-contact village before the arrival of Christian missionaries and also included a lagoon, waterfalls, streams, and 12 acres of gardens.
Its focus, was its 294-room hotel. Terra Ceramics was hired to create some drinking vessels for the new establishment, including a volcano mug and a bamboo server.
In October 1977, the entire resort was sold to Sheraton, which operated it for a time under its own banner. After which, it changed hands several times.
Vagabond's House
Los Angeles, California, United States (Closed)
Opened December 3rd, 1946.
Joe Chastek was first introduced to Polynesia when he and a high school buddy stowed away to the Philippines when they were both 17. Joe was one of the first to open a club with the South Seas motif. His first pre-Tiki bar was the Zamboanga. His second was the Tradewinds. His third was Vagabond's House. The name came from Don Blanding's poem of the same name. Don and Joe were acquaintances.
The interior combined tropical motifs and decor from many countries, including the South Pacific, the Philippines, Africa, and Mexico. There was lots of bamboo, matting, totem poles, glass floats, etc...
Joe often threw luau styled parties but the signature dish on the menu was curry.
The building in which Vagabond's House was located is a prime example of the Spanish Churrigueresque style practiced in the mid-1920s by the firm of Morgan, Walls and Clements and perfected by its chief designer, Stiles O. Clements.
The building was designated as a Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument in 1983.
Several popular Wilshire restaurants have occupied the space, notably the Cafe Opera in the 1930s and early '40s and the Vagabond's House later. La Fonda opened in 1969 as a venue for mariachi music. After being open for nearly forty years, La Fonda closed in 2007. The restaurant reopened in 2016, and it once again regularly offers live mariachi music.
Lono Cove - Manchester
Manchester, United Kingdom (Closed)
Opened on October 10th, 2021 in Manchester's Northern Quarter.
Lono Cove's "contemporary tiki bar" brand had already been well-established in Chester (2018-2022) and had won a handful of industry awards. Branching out from what owner Luke Edge called its "prototype site" in the city of Chester, this new bar in Manchester’s Northern Quarter was a larger and more expansive version by all accounts.
Formerly the site of Apotheca on Thomas Street.
Appears to have closed @ April 2024.
Kanaloa - Houston
Houston, Texas, United States (Closed)
Opened September 5th, 2018.
Appears to have no connection to the chain of English Kanaloa bars that flourished from @2009-2020.
The exterior of the 2-story brick building was painted all-black.
Inside, the bar was decked out with a ton of multicolored fish floats hanging from the ceiling, a long bamboo bar stocked with a slew of top shelf rums and liqueurs, blue padded booths, polished koa wood tables, and large tiki murals painted on the walls. Outside the back was a patio seating area as well.
Barrera and his business partners Keith Doyle and Roland Keller, the team behind Wicklow Heights, wanted Kanaloa to be a place that would — like any great tiki bar — take drinkers out of the real world and into a kind of Polynesian fantasia. They called on Tiki Bosko to carve the tikis flanking the front doors and the wooden tabletops. Māk Studio, the firm behind EaDo’s Chapman and Kirby, created the tiki face wall murals. The stylish interiors, with deep blue hues, were the work of Leticia Ochoa’s Clover Design Studio.
By all accounts their drinks were fantastic. The food was supplied by Houston food truck Oh My Gogi which was given free rein in the kitchen. Menu items included a series of “tiki tots” including jerk chicken (seasoned grilled chicken, mozzarella cheese and pineapple pico de gallo) and Baja Shrimp (mozzarella, pico and guacamole). For vegans, there was “Beyond Baja Tots” made with plant-based protein, mozzarella, pico de gallo, cabbage and guacamole. There was also both grilled and fried shrimp tacos, a Korean salad and a Korean rice bowl.
Closed June 15th, 2021 -- another victim of the Covid pandemic shut-downs.
Flamingo's Tiki Bar
Cairns City, Queensland, Australia
Opened December 1st, 2018.
Flamingo's Tiki Bar operates from the basement at the Pacific Hotel (below Bushfire Flame Grill) on the Esplanade in the long-vacant site of a former bottleshop. It is a very small bar with only a 35 person capacity. Billing themselves as a "modern interpretation of tiki", this bar is brightly lit with tropical prints, palm trees, bamboo, hula girls wallpaper, and neon signs. It has more of a Miami feel than a dark and traditional Trader Vics vibe. They do have a serious rum collection (over 150 labels), but a light-hearted approach to serving their cocktails. They serve some drinks in tiki mugs but others are served in glassware with miniature pool blow-up flamingo coasters/huggies.
Islander Beach Lodge
New Smyrna Beach, Florida, United States
This seven-story, 150-room hotel had a fantastic Polynesian front entrance and theming when it first opened under the auspices of the Best Western chain in 1972.
Although the majority of the property was a generic white-washed multi-story building, the lava rock facia along the ground floor and the grand port cochere entrance transformed it.
Today, the port cochere has been removed, and the white-washed multi-story building remains the same, but there is still some lava rock on the ground floor.
The site is now re-named the Islander Beach Resort.
Background rendering is by artist Bob Adams.
Black Tahiti
Washington, District of Columbia, United States (Closed)
Black Tahiti was a Washington, DC restaurant owned by the proprietor of Blackie's House of Beef, Ulysses G. "Blackie" Auger, and his wife, Lulu H. Auger. These restaurateurs started with Blackie's House of Beef in 1952 and then opened dozens of coffee shops and affiliated restaurants, including the Black Rose, the Black Saddle, the Black Bird, the Black Gun, the Black Russian and the Black Frisco.
Along with the similarly named locations, they opened Black Tahiti after being inspired by a trip to the South Pacific (probably in the 70s-80s).
Very little is left to remember this location, save the matchbook covers and hurricane glasses printed with their logo tiki.
China Dragon Restaurant & Motor Inn & Tikki Lounge
Hooksett, New Hampshire, United States (Closed)
Established as early as 1965.
China Dragon Restaurant & Motor Inn was located on Hooksett Rd. in Hooksett, New Hampshire, just north of Riley's Guns.
Although it had a great A-frame entrance, this restaurant was almost entirely Chinese-themed except for what they labeled a "Tikki Lounge" that was decorated with Polynesian style masks on the walls, a large mural featuring Polynesian islanders in a beach scene, and a large mermaid statue.
There was a separate cocktail menu of tiki cocktails for the lounge, with a tiki figure on the front.
The restaurant and inn was destroyed in a fire in early 1988. As late as 2021, this lot still appears to be vacant.
This location was at one time also known as the Jade Dragon and was previously know as Allen Lodge and Goat-Land Ballroom.
The old marble dragons that once adorned the front of the restaurant are now located on the grounds of the Prescott Library.