The Smoke House
The Smoke House on Lakeside Drive has anchored Burbank's dining scene for decades, drawing a mix of studio-adjacent regulars and first-timers drawn by its reputation for American classics and a dining room that reads more old Hollywood supper club than casual chain. Positioned among Burbank's more established sit-down options, it occupies a particular lane in the city's mid-range restaurant mix.
Pearl is the En Primeur Club membership app — saves, bookings, and concierge access live there. Same editors, same standards.
- Address
- 4420 Lakeside Dr, Burbank, CA 91505
- Phone
- +18188453731
- Website
- smokehouse1946.com

Where the Room Does the Work
Burbank's restaurant scene has always operated in two registers: fast-casual spots serving the studio lot crowd between shoots, and a smaller tier of sit-down rooms with staying power. The Smoke House at 4420 Lakeside Drive belongs firmly to the second category. It has the kind of physical presence that newer openings in the area tend to lack, a dining room that communicates longevity before a single dish arrives. Dark wood paneling, deep booths, and low lighting characterize the interior, placing it in a lineage of mid-century American steakhouses and supper clubs that once defined West Coast dining. That lineage is not affectation here; it is the product of genuine age and accumulated use.
The design logic of rooms like this one is worth understanding on its own terms. The wide-booth format, now rare in contemporary restaurant design, was built around extended visits: lingering over a second drink, conducting a business conversation, or sharing a long dinner without feeling pressured to vacate. Modern restaurant design has largely moved in the opposite direction, optimizing for turnover and open-plan sightlines. The Smoke House's spatial arrangement represents a counter-position to that trend, whether by design or by virtue of simply not changing. Either way, the result is a room that absorbs noise differently and creates a degree of privacy that is hard to find in Burbank's newer options.
Burbank's Dining Coordinates
To place The Smoke House accurately in the city's dining picture, it helps to map the wider field. Burbank's restaurant options have diversified considerably over the past decade. Gindi Thai represents the more contemporary, ingredient-forward end of the city's mid-range. Cafe de Olla anchors the Mexican comfort food corridor with regional specificity. Amor A Mi draws a younger crowd toward a more modern Latin format. Elena's Estiatorio covers Greek-Mediterranean with a family-dining emphasis. What The Smoke House offers within this mix is a different register entirely, a classically American room oriented around the kind of occasion dining that doesn't require a special occasion, just a preference for sitting somewhere that feels settled rather than provisional.
That positioning matters in a city like Burbank, which sits adjacent to Los Angeles but operates with its own hospitality character. LA's fine dining tier, venues like Providence in Los Angeles, operates at a different price and ambition level entirely. Nationally, the highest end of American restaurant culture runs through places like The French Laundry in Napa, Alinea in Chicago, Le Bernardin in New York City, and Lazy Bear in San Francisco. The Smoke House does not compete in that register, nor does it try to. Its competitive set is the durable neighborhood institution, a category that is harder to build and maintain than its apparent simplicity suggests.
The Physical Container and What It Signals
Rooms that have survived long enough to carry genuine patina tend to attract a specific kind of return visitor: someone who values continuity over novelty and reads a well-worn booth as a signal of reliability rather than neglect. This is a distinct psychological effect of older dining spaces, and it partially explains the sustained following that venues of this type accumulate across decades. The Smoke House's interior operates in this mode. The room is not preserved as a period piece or marketed as vintage; it simply is what it is, and regulars read that as a form of honesty.
From a pure design standpoint, the spatial grammar of a place like this, low ceilings, divided sections, booth seating along the walls with table seating at center, creates a dining environment that functions differently by time of day. A weekday lunch in such a room feels quieter and more contained than the same lunch would feel in a high-ceilinged open-plan space. An evening service fills out the dark wood and warm lighting in a way that more transparent, glass-forward contemporary interiors cannot replicate. The physical container shapes the experience in ways that menu changes alone cannot.
Planning Your Visit
The Smoke House sits on Lakeside Drive in Burbank, accessible from central Burbank and the studio district without requiring freeway travel for most visitors already in the area. For those coming from Los Angeles proper, Burbank is a straight shot north via the 5 or the 134, making this a feasible destination for an evening rather than just a local option. The Smoke House's regular hours run Monday through Thursday from 11:30 AM to 10:30 PM, Friday and Saturday from 11:30 AM to 11 PM, and Sunday from 10 AM to 9 PM. Reservations are recommended, and the price tier is moderate, about $40 per person.
For context on how American dining institutions perform elsewhere: Blue Hill at Stone Barns in Tarrytown, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, Addison in San Diego, The Inn at Little Washington, Atomix in New York City, Emeril's in New Orleans, and 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana in Hong Kong each demonstrate how a distinct physical identity and a well-defined dining format build long-term institutional gravity. The Smoke House operates at a different scale and price point, but the underlying logic is similar: a clearly defined room and a consistent proposition tend to outlast trendier alternatives.
A Lean Comparison
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Smoke HouseThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Lakeside, Classic American Steakhouse | $$ | |
| Ribs USA | American BBQ | $$ | |
| Bea Bea's | $$ | Lakeside Shopping Center, American Breakfast & Cafe | |
| The Castaway | Burbank, American Steakhouse | $$$ | |
| The Stage | $$ | Downtown Burbank, American Steakhouse with Seafood & Mediterranean Influences | |
| Gindi Thai | Toluca Lake, Thai-Sushi Fusion | $$ |
Continue exploring
More in Burbank
Restaurants in Burbank
Browse all →Bars in Burbank
Browse all →Hotels in Burbank
Browse all →Wineries in Burbank
Browse all →At a Glance
- Classic
- Iconic
- Cozy
- Family
- Celebration
- Casual Hangout
- Brunch
- Historic Building
Timeless old Hollywood glamour with a friendly star-studded atmosphere, dark cozy lighting, and classic steakhouse charm.















