Pavillon


Set along the Schanzengraben canal in Zürich's city centre, Pavillon holds two Michelin stars and an 18/20 Gault & Millau score under chef Laurent Eperon, whose vegetable-forward contemporary kitchen is matched by a wine programme helmed by Marc Almert, named Best Sommelier in the World at the 2019 ASI competition in Brussels. Few Zürich tables combine that level of kitchen and floor talent in a single room.

Where the Canal Meets the Counter
Approach Talstrasse from the Paradeplatz end and the shift in register is immediate. The financial district's glass facades give way to a quieter stretch along the Schanzengraben, the historic canal that threads through Zürich's old fortification line. Pavillon sits at this edge, its interior described as bright rather than formal, a deliberate counterpoint to the heavier register that Swiss fine dining once defaulted to. The canal setting places it physically apart from the cluster of destination restaurants in the Kreis 1 core, and that sense of slight remove carries into the room itself.
For context on how Zürich's fine dining scene has evolved, our full Zürich restaurants guide maps the city's current range from neighbourhood bistros to multi-star rooms.
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Get Exclusive Access →The Kitchen and the Floor as a Single Argument
The editorial angle that defines Pavillon most clearly is not the cuisine alone but the alignment between what arrives on the plate and what is poured into the glass. Two Michelin stars, awarded in the 2019 guide, and an 18/20 at Gault & Millau put chef Laurent Eperon's kitchen inside a very small Swiss peer group. At that tier, the room and the cellar are part of the proposition, and Pavillon's case rests heavily on the floor programme built around Marc Almert.
Almert was named Leading Sommelier in the World at the Association de la Sommellerie Internationale competition held in Brussels in March 2019, the same cycle in which the kitchen received its second Michelin star. The coincidence of timing matters: it signals that both sides of the service equation reached a recognised peak simultaneously, rather than one compensating for weaknesses in the other. At the two-star level in Switzerland, that kind of front-of-house credential is rare. Comparable Swiss addresses, including Schloss Schauenstein in Fürstenau and Cheval Blanc by Peter Knogl in Basel, have built strong reputations on kitchen excellence; the sommelier programme at Pavillon places it in a different conversation about what a complete fine dining experience requires.
For readers exploring Switzerland's broader multi-star circuit, Hotel de Ville Crissier in Crissier and Memories in Bad Ragaz each represent the kind of destination table against which Pavillon naturally sits in comparison. Further afield, 7132 Silver in Vals and Colonnade in Lucerne round out the picture of where Swiss fine dining operates at its most serious.
A Kitchen Built Around Vegetables and Contrast
Swiss fine dining has historically followed a French-influenced protein-forward model, with the prestige cut as the structural anchor of any serious tasting menu. Eperon's approach at Pavillon departs from that template. The Gault & Millau description of the kitchen emphasises colourful vegetables in abundance and unusual combinations, language that points toward a contemporary French-trained sensibility applied to produce-led cooking rather than classical sauce work.
This is not a vegetarian restaurant but a kitchen where vegetables operate as primary rather than supporting elements, and where the interest comes from juxtaposition rather than richness. In the current European fine dining context, that places Pavillon closer to a strand of cooking that has gained traction in Scandinavian and Basque kitchens, applied here within a Swiss setting. The Gault & Millau score of 18/20 — a level reached by very few Swiss restaurants — confirms that the execution backs the ambition.
At the global level, contrast-driven tasting menus have become a defining format at serious addresses like Le Bernardin in New York City, where a single primary ingredient carries the structural logic of a course. Pavillon's vegetable emphasis suggests a similar discipline applied to produce sourcing and textural contrast rather than classical technique as spectacle.
What the Awards Signal About Booking and Expectation
Two Michelin stars in a Swiss city with a relatively concentrated fine dining market means Pavillon competes for tables with an international as well as local clientele. Zürich's position as a major financial centre generates consistent demand for serious restaurant experiences at this price point, and a double-starred room with a world-recognised sommelier programme will attract wine-focused travellers who plan visits around cellar access rather than simply cuisine. That demand pattern suggests advance booking is appropriate for any visit, particularly for weekend services or if specific wine pairing options are part of the plan.
Zürich's hospitality infrastructure surrounding a visit of this kind is covered in our full Zürich hotels guide, while pre- or post-dinner options are mapped across our Zürich bars guide. For those building a longer Zürich itinerary, our Zürich experiences guide and Zürich wineries guide cover the wider scene.
How Pavillon Sits in Its Zürich Neighbourhood Context
The Talstrasse address places Pavillon at the southern edge of Zürich's Kreis 1, within walking distance of the lake and a short distance from the Hauptbahnhof. It is a location that reads as central without being embedded in the high-traffic tourist zones around Bahnhofstrasse. The Schanzengraben canal side setting gives the restaurant a spatial identity that distinguishes it from the more urban hotel dining rooms that occupy comparable price tiers in the city.
Zürich's broader restaurant scene at the non-starred level includes addresses like Alten Löwen, Anoah, Antiquario da Marco, Aurora, and Bar 45, each operating in different registers across the city's dining spectrum. Pavillon sits at a remove from all of them by price tier and format, but understanding the full range helps calibrate expectations for what the city offers across an itinerary. Internationally, the team-first model that defines Pavillon's identity has parallels at addresses like Emeril's in New Orleans, where front-of-house programme and kitchen vision have historically been treated as equally weighted components of the overall offer.
Planning Your Visit
Pavillon is located at Talstrasse 1, 8001 Zürich, on the Schanzengraben canal. The address is central enough to reach on foot from multiple points in Kreis 1, and the nearest tram stops put it within easy range of the main transport network. Given the 2019 Michelin two-star status and Marc Almert's ASI world title, both of which place this room in a peer set that attracts visitors from outside Switzerland, reservations should be made well ahead of the intended date, particularly for Friday and Saturday evenings. No pricing, hours, or booking platform details are confirmed in the data available, so readers should verify current arrangements directly with the restaurant before travelling. The World of Fine Wine's two-star accreditation adds a further wine-programme credential that reinforces the case for engaging with the full pairing option if available.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Is Pavillon a family-friendly restaurant?
- No. At the two-Michelin-star level in Zürich, Pavillon operates within a formal fine dining format that is not designed for young children.
- How would you describe the vibe at Pavillon?
- If you arrive expecting the hushed solemnity that characterises some Swiss fine dining rooms, Pavillon may read differently: the canal-side setting and a kitchen oriented toward bright, vegetable-forward cooking give it a less austere register than its award tally might suggest. That said, the two Michelin stars and the presence of a world-title sommelier mean the overall format is structured and serious. It is a room where the food and wine programme drive the experience, not the decor or the spectacle.
- What do regulars order at Pavillon?
- The Gault & Millau commentary points consistently to vegetable-led courses and unexpected ingredient combinations as the signatures of Eperon's kitchen. At a two-star address with an 18/20 score, the tasting menu is the obvious route, and with Marc Almert's wine programme available, a paired option is what the room is built to deliver.
- Should I book Pavillon in advance?
- If you are visiting Zürich specifically for a two-star experience and want to access Marc Almert's cellar programme, yes, booking ahead is appropriate. Zürich's fine dining demand is consistent year-round given the city's financial sector base, and a room with this award profile will fill on weekend services.
- What makes Pavillon worth seeking out?
- The convergence of a two-Michelin-star kitchen, an 18/20 Gault & Millau score, and a sommelier holding the ASI world title is not a combination you find in many rooms globally. The vegetable-forward contemporary approach also gives the kitchen a distinct identity within Swiss fine dining, where protein-led classical cooking has historically dominated at this tier.
Cuisine and Recognition
A compact peer snapshot based on similar venues we track.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pavillon | In a rural setting, on the banks of the Schanzengraben canal, and with a bright… | This venue | |
| Alten Löwen | |||
| Anoah | |||
| Antiquario da Marco | |||
| Aurora | |||
| Bar 45 |
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