Four cities, four moods – contemporary spaces where coffee is just the beginning, and atmosphere is built with care.




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% ΔRΔBICΔ is more than a café – it’s a lifestyle shaped by design. Their latest outpost has opened in a neoclassical building on Budapest’s Király Street, originally designed by József Hild. The interior was reimagined by Paris-based studio ciguë, with handcrafted details by the iconic Zsolnay porcelain manufactory. The brand is led by Queenie Rosita Law and Nicholas Wei Kun Chu, founders of Q Contemporary – devoted patrons of contemporary art and long-time admirers of Budapest.
Photo: Miklós Horváth
40 Király Street, 1061 Budapest, Hungary




MOJI café & MOMO
MOJI café is nestled in the heart of Mikulov’s old town, offering a calm aesthetic and thoughtful hospitality. Alongside specialty coffee and ceremonial matcha, the menu includes seasonal breakfasts and homemade desserts, all served in a carefully composed space. Just a few steps away is its sister venue, MOMO – bolder in tone, featuring natural wines and playful visuals. A different world, cut from the same attentive cloth.
MOJI café, Svobody 4, 692 01 Mikulov, Czech Republic
MOMO café, Náměstí 3, Mikulov, Czech Republic
Photographer: @michaela.dobi




HELEN CAFE
Tucked into the ground floor of a boutique office building in Wrocław’s Borek district, Helen Café blends calm surroundings with the city's creative energy. The team behind Napa restaurant and Projekt Rośliny has envisioned a quiet, Italian-inflected spot where tramezzini are reinterpreted, wines are natural, and the interior—designed by CUDO: studio—leans into a warm, earthy minimalism. Helen is a breakfast place, a casual meeting room, a wine bar—and in the evenings, guest chefs take over the kitchen.
Januszowicka 5, 53-125 Wrocław, Poland
Fotó: Migdał Studio




Woda Klubopiekarnia
Set in the post-industrial setting of Bydgoszcz’s Mill Island, Woda Café is both café and community hub. Designed by Znamy Sie Studio, the interior pairs raw concrete, exposed steel beams and soft natural light—minimalist, but inviting. Open and flexible, the space hosts everything from coffee rituals to club nights and creative gatherings. Recently hailed as one of the most beautiful cafés in Europe, Woda offers a clean, quiet answer to the question of how hospitality and spatial culture can meet.
10 Mennica Street, 85-112 Bydgoszcz, Poland
Photo: ONI Studio