Inside Mumbai’s New Wave of Design-Forward Cocktail Bars

Mumbai’s cocktail culture is entering a new chapter. For years, the city’s nightlife leaned toward large venues, high-energy music, and drinks designed for speed rather than experience. Today, however, a new generation of bars is shifting the conversation toward atmosphere, architecture, and thoughtful design spaces where the setting shapes how the evening unfolds.

Across neighbourhoods like Bandra, bars are increasingly embracing a slower, more intentional approach to hospitality. Lighting, spatial flow, textures, and acoustics are becoming as important as the cocktails themselves. These design-forward spaces are smaller, more intimate, and crafted to encourage conversation and lingering, reflecting a global shift where cocktail bars feel closer to cultural living rooms than nightlife venues.

Tucked discreetly behind the white façade of Olive in Bandra, Call Me Sofia is one of the most compelling examples of this design-forward movement. Conceived by AD Singh and the Olive Group, the bar introduces a concept rarely explored in the city before the Italian aperitivo ritual, where the early evening becomes a moment to pause, gather, and ease gradually into the night.

Unlike traditional cocktail bars that centre themselves around a dominant bar counter or dramatic design statement, Sofia’s layout unfolds with deliberate softness. The semi-open structure allows the space to breathe, drawing in natural light and air from the courtyard while creating a fluid connection between indoors and outdoors. As daylight fades, the bar gradually transforms from a sunlit gathering space into a warm, golden refuge that feels perfectly suited to lingering conversations.

The design, led by Sabina Singh and the Olive Group’s in-house team, blends rustic Italian references with Bandra’s relaxed sensibility. Warm wood tones, textured surfaces, and softly lit alcoves create a space that feels quietly elegant rather than performative. At its centre stands a long-standing tree from the Olive courtyard, thoughtfully integrated into the bar’s layout as an organic focal point that anchors the room in both memory and place.

This thoughtful design philosophy reflects a broader shift in Mumbai’s hospitality landscape. Rather than overwhelming guests with spectacle, bars like Call Me Sofia are crafting environments where people instinctively slow down. The architecture invites conversation, the lighting softens the evening, and the space itself becomes part of the experience.

As Mumbai’s evolving drinkers grow increasingly curious about more mindful, design-forward cocktail bars, Sofia doesn’t attempt to dominate the room. Instead, it quietly shapes the evening around it, one where architecture, ambience, and aperitivo cocktails come together to create a space that feels as much about the moment as it does about the drink.

NEWS | Manu Chandra announces departure from Olive Group

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The partner of the group company and founder of iconic Monkey Bar, Toast & Tonic and Fatty Bao brands broke the news on social media, and was followed by a statement issued by AD Singh, MD of the Olive Group of restaurants.

Chef Manu Chandra announced his departure from the Olive Group on social media on Monday, August 23, 2021.

Chandra, who was co-founder of Olive Cafes South Pvt. Ltd, along with Chetan Rampal and then partner of the group company in a long post on Instagram as well as Facebook entitled ‘So Long and Thanks for all the Baos’ announced his departure.

“To run a restaurant is a great honour and greater responsibility…And that has been mine for seventeen years as a chef at Olive Beach, and subsequently as a partner with the company. For this I shall always be deeply grateful. It is wrenching to walk away from the many spaces which I have built, and which have been home to these precious milestones in your life. And this departure is no less of a milestone in my journey as a chef,” Chandra wrote.

He went on to speak about the brands which he had built and created.

“Monkey Bar was India’s first gastropub which updated and reimagined traditional Indian flavours…Fatty Bao turned a setback—the shuttering of Likethatonly—into a learning that paved the way to a runaway success…Toast & Tonic led to the revival of gin, striking that rare balance between comfort and cool. Cancan upgraded the ubiquitous Chinese restaurant with great elan. We persisted, we survived, we excelled,” he said.

On what his plans were for the future, he simply said, “I step forward towards a bigger canvas and greater ambition—to finally bring to fruition cherished dreams and ideas that were set aside to focus on the daily grind.”

AD Singh, Managing Director, Olive Group of restaurants, also issued a statement on the departure.

“All good things must come to an end goes the adage. Though what it does is pave the way for fresh beginnings and new legacies. It is with sadness that we announce the moving on from the Olive Family, its two partners Chetan Rampal and Manu Chandra,” he said, adding that, “As we part ways amicably, we know that some relationships transcend mere employment, and remain grounded in the goodwill and camaraderie built over these past many years. We wish them the very best in whatever they pursue on their new journeys and am sure they will continue to delight and entertain you as they always have.”

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