Tayēr + Elementary

Tayēr + Elementary occupies a split-room format on Old Street that has come to define a certain strain of serious London cocktail culture: technically demanding drinks on one side, a more accessible walk-in bar on the other. Led by Alex Kratena and Monica Berg, the bar earned an Opinionated About Dining Casual in Europe ranking in 2025 and holds a 4.4 Google rating across more than 760 reviews.
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- Address
- 152 Old St, London EC1V 9BW, United Kingdom
- Phone
- +44 20 3011 1153
- Website
- tayer-elementary.com

If you drink one cocktail in London this year, drink it here
London's cocktail scene has spent the better part of a decade splitting into two recognisable camps: high-volume venues chasing trend cycles, and a smaller cohort of technically focused bars where the sourcing of ingredients carries as much weight as the spirit list. Tayēr + Elementary, at 152 Old Street in EC1V, sits firmly in the second group. Its 4.4 rating across 828 Google reviews points to a steady level of approval among guests.
Two rooms, two registers
The split-room format at Old Street is not just an architectural quirk, it reflects a considered position on how a bar can serve different types of drinkers without compromising either experience. Elementary operates as the more accessible front-of-house: a walk-in counter where shorter, ingredient-driven drinks are available without advance planning. Tayēr runs as the deeper programme, where the sourcing logic and technical construction behind each drink is given more room to breathe. This kind of structural division has precedents in the broader cocktail world, but it remains rare in London, where most ambitious bars choose one register and hold it. The model allows a single address to serve both local regulars and destination drinkers.
Sourcing as the editorial argument
At Tayēr + Elementary, the sourcing of ingredients is central to the drinks programme. London's leading cocktail bars have increasingly moved toward a food-world sourcing logic: direct relationships with producers, seasonal ingredient rotation, and an awareness of provenance that mirrors what the city's better kitchens have been doing for years. Tayēr + Elementary has been one of the clearer articulations of that approach on the bar side. Ingredient sourcing at this level is not decorative, it changes the flavour profile of the drink in ways that are legible to anyone paying attention. A fermented base, a foraged element, or a house-made tincture from a named botanical source produces a different result than a generic substitute, and the leading bars in this tier make that difference apparent without over-explaining it.
Alex Kratena, Monica Berg, and the credentials behind the programme
The bar's positioning is inseparable from the professional background of its founders. Alex Kratena's tenure at Artesian at The Langham placed him inside one of London's most scrutinised cocktail programmes. Monica Berg's work spans Scandinavian bar culture, a region that has contributed significantly to the ingredient-first, low-intervention approach now prevalent in serious cocktail bars globally. Together, they represent a specific strand of expertise: internationalist in training, technically grounded, and sceptical of theatrics for its own sake. Their credentials function here the way a Michelin-starred kitchen pedigree functions at a fine dining table, as a signal about the standards being applied, not as a story to be told.
Old Street as context
EC1V address matters. Old Street's character has shifted considerably over the past fifteen years, moving from light-industrial residue to a mixed neighbourhood where tech offices, independent hospitality, and older local businesses coexist at varying degrees of tension. For a serious bar programme, the location is an asset: it draws a clientele that is curious rather than merely fashionable, and it sits outside the West End circuits that can flatten ambition into service volume. The nearest comparison internationally, bars that operate a technically serious programme from a non-central, working neighbourhood address, would include ABV in San Francisco and Bar Contra in New York City, both of which have used neighbourhood positioning to their advantage.
Where Tayēr + Elementary sits in the London bar picture
London's bar scene at the top tier has never been more stratified. Hotel bars like Scarfes Bar serve a different function, atmosphere and occasion-drinking, with drinks as one component among several. Tayēr + Elementary is not that. It belongs to the cohort where the drink itself is the primary object, and where the sourcing, preparation, and presentation of that drink constitute the editorial argument of the evening. For those extending a UK trip beyond the capital, comparable levels of kitchen seriousness are applied at The Fat Duck in Bray, L'Enclume in Cartmel, Moor Hall in Aughton, Gidleigh Park in Chagford, Hand and Flowers in Marlow, and Le Manoir aux Quat' Saisons in Great Milton, all approaching their respective disciplines with the same sourcing rigour that defines Tayēr + Elementary's bar programme.
Planning your visit
Tayēr + Elementary is located at 152 Old Street, EC1V 9BW, a short walk from Old Street station. The Elementary side of the bar operates as a walk-in space, which makes it accessible on shorter notice than the Tayēr programme. For the fuller experience, checking the bar's current booking arrangements directly is advisable, as availability at this tier tends to be limited. The 4.4 average across 828 Google reviews suggests a consistent experience across a broad range of visits.
Awards and Standing
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tayēr + Elementary | Portuguese-Chinese Fusion Bar Snacks | $$$$ | St Luke's | |
| Studio Frantzén | Nordic-French-Asian Fusion | $$$$ | , | Knightsbridge |
| White City House | Modern Brasserie with Japanese and International Influences | $$$$ | , | White City |
| Akira Back London | Modern Japanese-Korean Fusion Fine Dining | $$$ | , | Mayfair |
| Jaks | Japanese & Mediterranean Fusion | $$$ | , | St Luke's |
| SUSHISAMBA | Japanese-Peruvian-Brazilian Fusion | $$$$ | , | Broadgate |
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Industrial aesthetic with exposed elements in the diner-style front bar and an intimate, test-kitchen vibe in the back with a striking hexagonal bar station.















