Across the world, chefs, artists, and hospitality brands are transforming dinner into immersive theater, replacing conventional dining rooms with floating banquets, rotating restaurants and cinematic environments that make the meal itself feel extraordinary.

The shift comes as consumers become hyper-selective about eating out. According to VML’s Future 100: 2026 report, almost half (49%) of global consumers say they are cutting back on dining out because of financial pressures. Rather than lowering expectations, however, consumers are becoming far more intentional about when and where they spend. Restaurants are responding by creating experiences that justify leaving home, meals that cannot be replicated through delivery apps, home cooking, or even traditional fine dining.

One of this year’s most arresting examples comes from the Mediterranean. Banquet on the Sea, conceived by Paris-based culinary scenographer Alix Lacloche, abandons almost every convention of restaurant design. Guests wearing wetsuits gather chest-deep in the waters off Marseille around a floating linen-covered table, sharing a meal while standing in the open sea. Created in collaboration with creative residency Résidence Vue Mer and the cult waterfront restaurant Tuba Club, the project sits somewhere between performance art, hospitality, and environmental installation. By removing walls, floors and even chairs, it asks a deceptively simple question: does a meal still feel like a restaurant when nature is the dining room?

More commercial operators are adopting similar theatrics. In the UK, experiential hospitality company Feast Events has built an entire business around transporting diners into unexpected environments. Feast in a Spin, which wrapped in June, served a multi-course dinner inside a slowly rotating ferris wheel overlooking Marlow. Other concepts include Feast on Cloud 9, where afternoon tea and dinner are served inside stationary hot-air balloons, and Feast over Flame, which begins with a private boat ride to a hidden riverside location before guests prepare elements of a five-course barbecue feast over Big Green Egg grills. Here, the journey is deliberately designed to be as memorable as the menu.

Courtesy of trip.com Group
Taste of China packages a meal as a fully choreographed cultural production. Courtesy of trip.com Group

Asia is pushing immersive dining even further into the mainstream. In Shanghai, Taste of China, presented by trip.com Group, packages a meal as a fully choreographed cultural production. Diners travel through different regions of China via a seven-course tasting menu accompanied by a 270-degree projection theater, panoramic sound, interactive storytelling, live performances and optional themed costumes. Rather than simply illustrating the dishes, every scene changes with the course being served, turning dinner into a cinematic narrative that appeals as much to families and tourists as to advanced gastronomes. It demonstrates how immersive dining is expanding beyond avant-garde fine dining into scalable commercial entertainment.

The growing popularity of these experiences reflects a broader societal. According to the Future 100: 2026 report, 70% of people globally prefer to spend money on experiences rather than material goods; 86% are drawn to experiences that inspire awe, wonder, or a new perspective; and 87% value experiences that offer a sense of connection to others. Restaurants are becoming stages where food, design, performance and social media coexist. The most successful concepts no longer ask guests to simply taste a dish but inviting them to step inside a story.

With consumers fiercely guarding their discretionary spend, dinner has morphed into high-concept theater—and the plate is just a prop. In the years ahead, hospitality may increasingly be judged not only by the quality of its cuisine, but by its ability to transport diners somewhere they have never been before, even if only for the length of a meal.

Please provide your contact information to continue.

Before submitting your information, please read our Privacy Policy as it contains detailed information on the processing of your personal data and how we use it.

Související obsah

Lay’s has opened its first Lay’s Potato Restaurant in Shanghai’s Xintiandi. Courtesy of Lay’s
Insight

Snackstaurants

Bite-sized treats get a big, permanent upgrade.
Přečíst článek
Submersive Rendering 1 credit Lua Brice courtesy of Submersive
Insight

Immersive wellness

Immersive experiences go beyond entertainment to deliver therapeutic impact.
Přečíst článek