Owen's Fish Camp
Owen's Fish Camp on Burns Court has become one of Sarasota's most talked-about addresses for Gulf Coast seafood, drawing locals and visitors to its rustic, camp-style setting. The kitchen leans into Florida's regional fishing traditions, with a menu built around fresh catches and Southern coastal flavors. It sits in a neighbourhood better known for galleries and boutiques, which only adds to its character.
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- Address
- 516 Burns Ct, Sarasota, FL 34236
- Phone
- +19419516936
- Website
- owensfishcamp.com

Burns Court and the Camp That Stayed
Burns Court is one of Sarasota's quieter cultural pockets, a short block of Mediterranean Revival bungalows that house galleries, design studios, and independent dining rooms rather than the tourist-facing waterfront strip. Owen's Fish Camp at 516 Burns Court fits that register. The building reads as deliberately low-key: weathered timber, outdoor seating that puts you in the thick of the street, and an interior that signals fish shack more than fine dining room. That aesthetic positioning is not accidental. In a Florida coastal city where the dining conversation has increasingly split between polished hotel restaurants and serious European formats, the fish camp genre holds a specific and stubbornly local place.
The broader American seafood dining scene has evolved in two directions over the past decade. On one end, highly technical programs like Le Bernardin in New York City and Providence in Los Angeles have pushed seafood into the territory of high-concept precision. On the other, a quieter counter-movement has reasserted the value of regional fishing traditions, of sourcing from identifiable waters and preparing fish in ways that reflect where you actually are. Owen's Fish Camp sits in that second current, which has grown in credibility nationally as diners have become more skeptical of cuisine that travels far from its source.
How the Concept Has Settled Over Time
The fish camp format in Florida has a long history rooted in working waterways and seasonal catches rather than in chef-driven narrative. Early versions were functional, often ramshackle operations built around whatever came off the boats. Over time, the format has been reinterpreted in higher-traffic urban settings, softened and made more accessible without entirely losing its rough-edged character. Owen's Fish Camp represents one version of that reinterpretation: the camp aesthetic preserved in a neighbourhood setting, with a kitchen approach that keeps Gulf Coast seafood at the center rather than treating it as a canvas for culinary showmanship.
What has changed in Sarasota's dining environment since the venue opened is the competitive context around it. The city has attracted serious European concepts, including Alma de España and the Italian-focused 15 South by Napule, alongside Mediterranean-inflected rooms such as Amore Restaurant. Against that backdrop, a venue anchored in Florida's own fishing traditions rather than in imported culinary frameworks reads as a deliberate editorial choice, not a default.
The Regional Seafood Argument
Gulf Coast seafood carries genuine regional specificity. The warm, shallow waters of the eastern Gulf produce grouper, snapper, stone crab, and mullet under conditions quite different from New England or Pacific Northwest fisheries, and the culinary traditions around those catches reflect that. Florida's fish camp cooking has historically been less about technique and more about proximity: getting the fish from water to plate with minimal interference, supplemented by Southern coastal pantry staples. The strongest versions of this genre make that proximity feel like a value proposition rather than a limitation.
The contrast with places like Blue Hill at Stone Barns in Tarrytown or Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg is instructive. Both of those operations built farm-to-table sourcing into a high-concept dining framework. The fish camp tradition operates from a similar sourcing logic but strips away the tasting menu architecture entirely, presenting regional produce in formats that feel vernacular rather than composed. That is a harder editorial position to hold in a city with growing fine-dining ambitions, and it is part of what distinguishes venues like Owen's Fish Camp from the broader Sarasota field.
Other Sarasota rooms working at different registers include 1592 and Arts & Central, which lean into the neighbourhood bistro format, and Boca, which occupies a slightly more formal tier. The fish camp sits in a different category from all of them, closer in spirit to the waterfront working-restaurant tradition than to any of the city's European-influenced dining rooms.
Planning a Visit
Owen's Fish Camp is located at 516 Burns Court in Sarasota's Burns Court district, within walkable distance of the Rosemary District and close to the city's main downtown arts corridor. The neighbourhood draws a mixed crowd of gallery visitors, design professionals, and local regulars, which means the room tends to skew toward residents rather than resort tourists. Given the venue's profile and the relatively small scale typical of Burns Court properties, checking current booking availability directly is advisable before planning an evening visit, particularly on weekends when the neighbourhood draws stronger foot traffic. Owen's Fish Camp is walk-in friendly and open Mon to Thu and Sun from 4 to 9:30 PM, and Fri to Sat from 4 to 10:30 PM.
For travellers building a broader Sarasota itinerary, the Burns Court location puts Owen's Fish Camp in natural proximity to the kind of evening that mixes a pre-dinner gallery walk with a low-key, regionally rooted dinner rather than a formal tasting-menu occasion. It sits at a different end of the spectrum from destination dining operations like Alinea in Chicago, The French Laundry in Napa, or Atomix in New York City, and that is precisely the point.
Recognition, Side-by-Side
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Owen's Fish CampThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Southern Seafood Shack | $$ | , | |
| Duval's Fresh. Local. Seafood. | Fresh Local Seafood | $$ | , | downtown |
| Elixir Tea House | High Tea & Afternoon Tea | $$ | , | Southside Village |
| mymamma | Authentic Southern Italian Trattoria | $$ | , | North Tamiami Trail |
| Arts & Central | Modern American Bistro | $$ | , | Rosemary District |
| Tripletail Seafood & Spirits | Fresh Local Seafood | $$$ | , | The Landings |
At a Glance
- Cozy
- Rustic
- Hidden Gem
- Classic
- Casual Hangout
- Family
- Craft Cocktails
- Local Sourcing
- Sustainable Seafood
Nostalgic and quaint with a casual, laid-back Southern hospitality vibe under a historic banyan tree and tire swing.














