Mius Bar
At MIUS Bar on Gough Street, Minus Workshop masterfully transforms a compact former retail space into a vibrant sanctuary, balancing mid-century modern design with functional elegance to enhance the cocktail.
Nestled on 29 Gough Street in Hong Kong’s pulsing Soho district, MIUS – crafted by Minus Workshop principal Kevin Yiu, turns a tight former home appliance retail space into a bright sanctuary embodying Shelley Tai’s “simple things, done right” ethos in every oak plank and brass glint. “Vibe is everything for a bar, so we first blocked external light pollution with blackout glazing on street-facing windows, sealing Soho’s neon while admitting soft daylight,” Yiu said.
Opened in August 2025 after an eight-month sprint from sketch to shaker, the design sidesteps Soho’s neon bombast for mid-century modern restraint: warm rusty oak warms the palette, silver metallics catch the light, and clean lines funnel focus to the cocktails.
High ceilings and this curated leather blind system bathe the interior in daylight by day, yielding to intimate layered glows at night, while a ruthless material edit – no fussy themes, just one or two iconic pieces – lets Tai’s precise cocktail creation command the stage.
The site’s constraints became its poetry under Yiu’s vision. A super-low central beam, an unwelcome inheritance, was recast not as flaw but focal point: clad in oak as a portal, it hovers like a sculptural spine, guiding sightlines and carving zones without apology
Minus Workshop conjured a spacious bar counter that illusions generosity through reflective accents and strategic voids: a 4.3m-long single-piece island counter stretches as the room’s heroic spine as the first glance of welcome bar. Flanking it, thick slabs of travertino marble form high tables that ground communal gatherings with raw, veined tactility. E&M services run neatly through hidden channels in the beam and walls, with oak joinery concealing wires while allowing easy access.
Signature touches elevate the contemplative mood – Lee Broom Chant 4×4 chandelier drifts like luminous orbs in a semi-private corner, casting pooled glows that invite pause. Yiu split bar operations across four counters to ease peak-hour crowds, keeping service clean and efficient. Entry flows simply from windows to bar, with stools and lounges framing the action as the beam spotlights Tai’s craft.
Patrons sense it instinctively: the space channels Shelley herself – welcoming, unpretentious, alive with honest energy. Evenings, lines snake pre-5PM, the air thick with quality drinking’s quiet revolution. In Hong Kong’s high-density hospitality grind, MIUS proves small can soar when constraints transmute to character, with Minus Workshop setting a blueprint for bars that endure: simple, right, profoundly felt.
Design: Minus Workshop
Photography: Steven Ko Interior Photography










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