Amass restaurant in Copenhagen
Amass in Copenhagen. Photography: Chris Tonnesen

Copenhagen was a design destination long before the New Nordic food revolution put it on the map as one of Europe’s gastronomic hotspots. Sometimes the two didn’t align but now a swathe of new eateries ensures design pilgrims are well fed and watered as well as sated aesthetically.

Here are 10 of our favourite Copenhagen restaurants and cafés where the tenets of Danish design – superb materials and craftsmanship – are still upheld but there’s a more relaxed attitude to mixing up the classics with other influences. Call it post-Nordic perhaps?

Noma

Photography: Jason Loucas
Photography: Jason Loucas

The second iteration of René Redzepi’s Noma restaurant has a raw, pure aesthetic in tune with its hyper-seasonal menu and sense of place. Housed in a cluster of farmlike buildings designed by Bjarke Ingels’ BIG and decorated by Studio David Thulstrup, Noma 2.0 celebrates materials like heart oak planks and custom-made bricks and the handmade with virtually everything from untreated oak tables and chairs, ceramics and hand-blown glasses created especially for the restaurant.
Refshalevej 96, 1432 Copenhagen K.

Admiralgade 26

Admiralgade 26 restaurant in Copenhagen

In making one of Copenhagen’s most beautiful restaurants, co-owners Christian Nedergaard and Sebastian Rind Nellemann used design ‘totems’ like Jean Prouvé chairs and Kaare Klint cabinets to emphasise 20th-century craft. With Danish and Japanese influences the menu is equally well-honed.
Admiralgade 26, 1066, Copenhagen K.

Kafeteria

Kafeteria at SMK, by Frederik Bille Brahe and Danh Vo
Photography: Elizabeth Heltoft Arnby

The conceptual artist Danh Vo and star chef Frederik Bille Brahe teamed up to re-invent and energise the museum café at Statens Museum for Kunst (Denmark’s national gallery). At Kafeteria, sculptural Isamu Noguchi lights and Enzo Mari’s utilitarian DIY furniture are married with delicious, wholesome food.
Statens Museum for Kunst, Sølvgade 48-50, 1307, Copenhagen K.

Café Royal at Radisson Blu Royal Hotel

Cafe Royal bar and restaurant, courtesy Radisson Blu Royal Hotel

Still the ultimate design destination, Arne Jacobsen’s Royal hotel has had a 21st-century revamp at the hands of Space Copenhagen. Off the stunning lobby with its curved marble staircase, the open-plan Café Royal is a laid-back bistro where Drop chairs are paired with Jacobsen’s lesser-known Mayor sofa and Giraffe dining table.
Hammerichsgade 1, 1611, Copenhagen V.

Amass

Amass restaurant in Copenhagen
Photography: Chris Tonnesen

Owner and chef Matt Orlando has gone so sustainable since opening his Copenhagen restaurant five years ago he’d rather show you his worm farm or miso made from lemon skins. But the recently updated, edgy space has much to please the maverick eye including a huge 3D graffiti work by the Greek artist Insane51, solid wood tables with side tables made from their offcuts and an urban garden of edible wonders.
Refshalevej 153, 1432, Copenhagen K

Winterspring Copenhagen

Winterspring restaurant interiors Copenhagen
Photography: Ditte Isager

With the sort of understated but exquisite detailing you’d expect from Ilse Crawford’s Studioilse, the first Winterspring café and dessert bar envelops diners with grace and goodwill. A grid of Okholm ceiling lamps throws soft lights on the bar made from Swedish Öland röd stone. Sweet and savoury delicacies complement the brand’s Nordic influenced ice creams and sorbets.
Store Strandstræde 16, 1255 Copenhagen K.

Kadeau København

Kadeau restaurant

The first thing you see at Copenhagen’s two Michelin-starred Kadeau restaurant is the open oak-lined kitchen. That encounter sets the tone for a warm and welcoming gastronomic experience celebrating the bounty of the island of Bornholm in the low-key but finely detailed dining room.
Wildersgade 10b, 1408, Copenhagen K.

Apollo Kantine & Bar

Apollo bar and restaurant
Via Apollo Bar

Situated in the Charlottenborg artspace, Frederik Bille Brahe’s Apollo Kantine serves an affordable daily vegetarian lunch consumed around communal tables on paint splattered Børge Mogensen chairs salvaged from the Royal Academy. A headless Apollo statue is the patron saint of the separate all-day-and-night bar where Bille Brahe’s simple Italian-style food is served from an open kitchen. Custom-made marquetry tables are illuminated by large-scale PH lamps created especially for Charlottenborg’s exhibition rooms in 1979.
Charlottenborg, Nyhavn 2, 1051, Copenhagen K.

Barr

Barr restaurant Copenhagen
Photography: Line Klein

Barr restaurant takes over the hallowed former Noma site. Norway’s Snøhetta lined the walls and ceilings around ancient rafters with 200-year-old oak that was milled in balloon-shaped curves using 3D mapping. Finn Juhl leather chairs and off-round solid oak tables are perfectly placed for devouring next level old-school food like pork schnitzel and frikadeller (Danish rissole).
Strandgade 93, 1401 Copenhagen K.

The Conservatory at Hotel Sanders

Hotel Sanders conservatory

Former ballet dancer Alexander Kølpin did such a good job using bespoke fittings to create a sense of patina in Hotel Sanders, it feels as if it’s been there for decades rather than months. Although the rooftop Conservatory evokes Singapore’s famous Raffles Hotel, the comfy Charlottenborg rattan chairs and side tables were designed locally by Modernist hero Arne Jacobsen in 1936 and are said to have been his preferred chair at home. The sunlit space is perfect for breakfast or snacks from the bar later in the day.
Tordenskjoldsgade 15, 1055, Copenhagen K.

Read next:
OMA creates Blox – a jenga-like new design hub in Copenhagen
Copenhagen Contemporary to drop anchor at Refshaleøen Island this summer

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