A tasting menu that feels like a journey through the streets of Thailand.
WHAT IT IS?
Bang Bang Bangkok is a new immersive restaurant created on July 2024 in Williansburg Brooklyn (NYC). The restaurant is designed like a Thai bus, with seats and windows that are actually screens projecting scenes from Bangkok: night markets, illuminated temples, chaotic traffic, and bustling streets.
Throughout a 10-course tasting menu, diners experience a 90-minute journey through the Thai capital. Each course represents a “stop,” from street food to the most sophisticated festive cuisine. The experience is complemented by ambient sounds and music, creating a truly multi-sensory journey without leaving Brooklyn.

WHY IT´S COOL?
his restaurant achieves something beyond food: it transports you without traveling. While dining, you embark on a sensorial journey that blends gastronomy, projection mapping, and music.
- It turns dinner into a theatrical journey, connecting the culinary with the visual and the emotional. It is a perfect example of the experience economy: you don’t just pay for the food, you pay for the memory of “having been in Bangkok” without leaving New York.
- It also carries a huge Instagrammable factor: the bus-like windows with projected city scenes and the immersive setting create irresistible photo and video moments.
- It is unique and surprising: even in a city like New York, where dining experiences are abundant, very few restaurants dare to merge travel and dinner so directly.


WHY IT HAS FUTURE GROWTH POTENTIAL?
Gastronomic tourism is booming, and this format attracts people who may not travel to Asia but still want to feel it.
- Also, the idea is highly scalable — imagine a “Rome on Wheels” or “Tokyo by Train.” It also aligns with the rise of immersive experiences, where people pay for memories rather than products.
- A flagship experience: more than just a restaurant, it acts as a sensory temple that sparks conversation, creates viral marketing moments, and builds long-term customer loyalty.
- Immersive economy on the rise: consumers increasingly value experiences that engage multiple senses and tell a story. Dining formats like this fit perfectly into the booming immersive sector.
Some sources and reviews:
https://www.theinfatuation.com/new-york/reviews/bang-bang-bangkok

Science of the Time
Science of the Time