Espresso at Dawn, Chirashi at Dusk: Welcome to Palm Vintage, the Cafe & Sushi Bar by City Hall
Right where tourists discover Philly and locals claim it as their own, Palm Vintage just gave everyone a very good reason to stop.
Walk past 1414 S. Penn Square on a quiet weekday morning and you’ll see something that feels plucked from a side street in Paris, or maybe a sun-drenched Miami café you stumbled into on vacation. Meet Palm Vintage, a glamorous cafe by day, and coming-soon cocktails with sushi at night, which has officially opened its doors inside the Ritz-Carlton Residences.

The backstory is genuinely lovely. Owner Houston Yang used to live upstairs in the very same building — walking past this space, then home to Waterfront Deli, essentially every single day. He saw a vision where others saw a basic deli counter, and Palm Vintage is ultimately a dream he’s been quietly building for his wife. We find that kind of origin story impossible not to root for.

And honestly? Every little decision they’ve made — from where the pastries come from (Mighty Bread for the moment), to how they’re planning on running evenings — shows how much thought went into this. As What Now Philadelphia reported when the project was first announced, the vision was to create somewhere that feels like “you’ve left the city, all while you’re still in the heart of the city.”
Standing inside Palm Vintage, the vision suddenly makes sense.
A Space That Makes You Want to Linger
From the moment you step in, the design does all the talking.
The curved marble bar with its fluted white base takes center stage, practically begging for someone, anyone to pull up one of the upholstered brass-framed stools and settle in. Arched golden alcoves line the back wall, stacked with crystal glassware that catches the light beautifully. A Lavazza commercial espresso machine anchors one end of the bar; a framed oil painting of City Hall hangs just opposite. The whole thing feels considered, European, and quietly grand.

The patterned hexagonal tile floors — white with a bold black floral inset — work in gorgeous contrast with the velvet bar stools and marble surfaces throughout. A gold-framed glass partition near the kitchen adds a kind of greenhouse elegance, separating the café from the back-of-house while letting light filter through. The palette of creams, off-whites, navy, bronze, gold is cohesive, echoing the architectural grandeur of City Hall right outside.

“The place feels more like a sit-down place,” Malik, their GM told us, “but we very much also offer coffee and pastries to go.” It’s designed for both — the quick morning pit stop and the two-hour afternoon stretch. We also love that they’re exploring a house-made chai program after a local artisan came in and basically offered to build one for them.
Two Concepts, One Daily Transformation
Palm Vintage officially runs as two distinct operations out of the same beautifully dressed room.

From 7 AM to 4 PM, it’s a European-style café — coffee, pastries, and elevated café fare including sandwiches, paninis, and salads. The team then closes down for roughly 30 minutes to an hour to “flip the space,” similar to other restaurants: resetting tables, repositioning the room, and shifting the entire atmosphere.

By 5 PM, it’ll be a full cocktail and sushi bar, open through midnight seven nights a week to start. Once the kitchen closes, the plan is for the bar to stay open and the music turned up just slightly, so it transitions into something more ambient and more intimate.

The sushi program draws from Houston Yang’s experience running Fushimi at The Shops at Liberty Place, but Palm Vintage is going for something more intimate here. No reservations — it’ll be first-come, first-served. “We don’t want just a bunch of reservations and people not getting the opportunity,” the team told us. We love that. The Philadelphia Inquirer’s May 2026 restaurant roundup noted the spot had already soft-opened for coffee while the full menu was being finalized.

Local Sourcing with European Soul
The display case is doing serious work. Currently pastries are coming from Mighty Bread, and the spread shows it: croissants, danishes, muffins and more, all lined up like they’re posing for a photo shoot (our shoot, but we didn’t stage them, promise).

And if that’s not enough to get you in the door, here’s something to get even more excited about: viennoiseries from Délice & Chocolat are coming soon. The Ardmore-based French pastry operation is run by Le Bec Fin alumni, so the croissant game is about to level up considerably. Bread, meanwhile, comes from Metropolitan Bakery via Merzbacher’s — a Philly institution, so no notes there.
The short version: whether you’re grabbing something on your way to the office or settling in for a proper café moment, the baked goods situation might be worth some in-person research.
The Devil’s in the Details (And Here, the Devil Has Very Good Taste)

One of the things to know about Palm Vintage is that the more you look around, the more you find. Every table gets its own little crystal accent lamp and a bud vase with fresh flowers. The gold cocktail taps are so good-looking they almost feel like sculpture.

Oh, and the bathroom. We know, we know, but seriously, trust us on this one. Navy ribbed tile floor to ceiling, a backlit oval mirror, gold fixtures, a black vessel sink. It genuinely looks like something out of a boutique hotel. When a spot puts this much thought into the bathroom, you know nothing was an afterthought.

The space also gets excellent natural light during café hours, creating that perfect European café feel where you can settle in with a coffee and pastry while watching the city go by outside.
A Game-Changer for the Area

What Houston and his team have created at an intersection of locals, commuters, and tourists is a complete transformation that brings sophistication and dining options to the City Hall area. The attention to design, commitment to local sourcing, and innovative dual-concept approach help make Palm Vintage a great addition to our bustling café and restaurant scene.

Palm Vintage is open, it looks incredible, and we’re so glad it’s here. This stretch of Penn Square just got a whole lot more interesting.
📍 1414 S. Penn Square (Ritz-Carlton Residences, ground floor)