Chez Smith

Chez Smith on Grubenstrasse has earned back-to-back Star Wine List recognition in 2025 and 2026, placing it among Zürich's more serious wine-focused addresses. The bar draws a neighbourhood crowd that returns for the list rather than the occasion, which is precisely what distinguishes it from the city's more performative wine bars. Practical to reach and unshowy in format, it rewards those who already know what they want.
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Grubenstrasse and the Zürich Wine Bar That Locals Actually Use
Zürich's wine bar scene has settled into two fairly distinct camps over the past several years. On one side sit the showcase operations: high-ceilinged rooms near the Bahnhofstrasse axis, ambitious by-the-glass programs designed for corporate entertaining, and price points that reflect the real estate. On the other sit the neighbourhood anchors, places where the list is serious but the format is not, where the crowd arrives on a Tuesday because the room feels like theirs. Chez Smith on Grubenstrasse 27 belongs firmly to the second category, and the Star Wine List awards it has collected in consecutive years (2025 and 2026) confirm that belonging to that category is not the same as settling for it.
What Star Wine List Recognition Actually Signals
Star Wine List operates as one of the more credible international wine bar award systems, evaluating depth of list, curation philosophy, and pricing structure rather than room design or celebrity attachment. Earning the designation twice in succession is not incidental: it places Chez Smith in a peer group that includes some of Switzerland's more deliberate wine operations, from Mövenpick Weinbar to addresses further afield like Grand Hotel Les Trois Rois in Basel and Vieil Ouchy in Lausanne. Within Zürich specifically, this level of sustained recognition puts it in conversation with bars that take the glass as seriously as the kitchen, even when the format stays deliberately low-key.
The significance of the 2026 renewal, in particular, matters for a simple reason: first-year awards sometimes reflect novelty. A second consecutive recognition suggests the list has depth, consistency, and the kind of ongoing curation that requires both attention and supply-chain relationships. That is not a small operational commitment for a neighbourhood address on a residential stretch of the city.
The Neighbourhood Role: Grubenstrasse as Context
Grubenstrasse sits in the Wiedikon district, a part of Zürich that has accumulated a quiet density of independent operators over the past decade without tipping into the self-conscious density of Langstrasse. The bars and restaurants here tend to serve a repeat customer base rather than a tourist circuit, which shapes everything from opening hours to list construction. A wine bar in this context earns its regulars through consistency rather than novelty programming.
That community dynamic is visible in how the better neighbourhood wine bars across Swiss cities tend to operate: the list changes with the seasons and the suppliers, the staff know what you drank last time, and the room does not require you to perform enthusiasm for the experience. Chez Smith fits that model. The address suggests a bar that functions as a genuine local institution rather than a destination engineered for out-of-neighbourhood visitors, though the Star Wine List credentials mean it draws both.
For comparison within Zürich's broader bar geography, addresses like Gamper Bar and Restaurant and Choupette Restaurant and Bar operate in the same general register of neighbourhood-facing hospitality, while Grande Café and Bar and 169 West represent the slightly more format-driven end of the city's bar spectrum. Chez Smith sits closer to the former in temperament, even as its wine credentials align it with the city's more serious list-driven operators.
Wine-Forward Bars and What They Ask of the Guest
A wine bar that earns sustained critical recognition typically expects something from the person sitting across the counter: some baseline curiosity about what is in the glass, a willingness to take a recommendation, and enough patience to engage with a list that may not be organised by grape variety alone. That dynamic tends to filter the crowd naturally. The regulars at an award-holding neighbourhood wine bar are rarely there because it is the obvious choice; they are there because they found it, returned, and decided it was worth keeping.
Switzerland's wine culture sits in an interesting position relative to the broader European scene. The domestic production, particularly from Valais and the Vaud shores of Lake Geneva, is largely consumed internally and rarely appears on export lists. A Swiss wine bar with serious credentials often serves as one of the few accessible windows into that domestic output for visitors who would not otherwise encounter it. Whether Chez Smith leans into that domestic story or positions itself as a broader European list operation is not confirmed by available data, but the Star Wine List framework does assess regional depth as part of its criteria.
Reaching Chez Smith and Planning Around It
The bar is at Grubenstrasse 27 in Zürich. Wiedikon is a short tram or S-Bahn ride from the central station, and the neighbourhood is walkable from several surrounding residential areas. For visitors staying closer to the lake or the old town, the commute is practical rather than significant.
Contact details and current hours are not publicly listed in the EP Club database at this time. Given the neighbourhood format and the calibre of list, walk-ins are plausible on quieter weekday evenings, but for a specific visit, checking directly with the venue in advance is the sensible approach. The same applies to current pricing: wine bars in this award tier in Swiss cities tend to sit at a premium relative to casual neighbourhood bars, though the Wiedikon address rather than a Bahnhofstrasse location typically moderates the markup somewhat. Other wine-focused operations across Switzerland worth knowing about, for comparison on trip planning, include Champagner Bar in Saas Fee and Jamming Corner in Unterseen, both of which operate in resort contexts with different pricing logics. City-based alternatives like Puregold Bar and Lounge in Glattpark round out the broader Swiss bar picture for those building a longer itinerary.
For anyone building a fuller picture of Zürich's bar and restaurant options, the EP Club Zürich guide maps the city's hospitality across neighbourhoods and formats, with comparative context across price tiers. And for those who extend their travels beyond Switzerland, Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu represents the kind of internationally recognised, format-disciplined bar operation that shares a similar seriousness of purpose, even across very different geographies.
Reputation First
A fast peer set for context, pulled from similar venues in our database.
| Venue | Awards | Cuisine | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chez Smith | This venue | ||
| 169 West | |||
| Choupette Restaurant & Bar | |||
| Gamper Bar & Restaurant | |||
| Mövenpick Weinbar |
At a Glance
- Cozy
- Trendy
- Industrial
- After Work
- Date Night
- Casual Hangout
- Design Destination
- Outdoor Terrace
- Lounge Seating
- Conventional Wine
Industrial loft atmosphere with modern, stylish, and cozy urban feel.














