Coffee Shops in Bali with Traditional Architecture ☕
- Wonderland Uluwatu

- Mar 27
- 2 min read
Spaces that truly feel like Indonesia
Bali is full of cafés — but only a handful actually connect you to the architecture, materials, and spirit of Indonesia.
These are the places where coffee is secondary to something deeper:hand-carved wood, open-air structures, rice field views, and spaces designed the way they’ve been for generations.
If you’re looking for cafés that feel grounded in place — this is where to start.
1. Copy House Bali – Uluwatu (Traditional Gladak on the Cliff)
Built inside a traditional Indonesian gladak,Copy House Bali is one of the rare places where architecture defines the entire experience.

Reclaimed teak wood structure from Java
Natural aging, texture, and patina
Quiet, stripped-back atmosphere
Cliff-top sunset views
This isn’t a designed café — it’s a preserved piece of Indonesia, placed on the edge of the ocean.
👉 Explore: www.copyhousebali.com
🌾 2. Kurasu at Panen Padi Lounge – Ubud (Heritage Estate Meets Craft Coffee)
Set within the historic Tanah Gajah estate, this space was once a private residence and now houses Kurasu.

Surrounded by rice paddies
Built as part of a heritage Balinese estate
Features artistic elements like mural ceilings
Designed as a place for reflection and connection
The experience blends Japanese precision in coffee with Balinese spatial philosophy, creating something calm, intentional, and rooted in culture.
🏛️ 3. Biku – Seminyak (Classic Joglo Architecture)
Housed in a traditional Javanese joglo, Biku is one of Bali’s most iconic heritage cafés.
Soaring wooden ceilings
Hand-carved structural beams
Antique interiors and layered textures
It feels like stepping into a different era — one where time slows down and the space carries its own history.
👉 Explore: bikubali.com

🌿 4. Wedja Bali – Ubud (Contemporary Built on Tradition)
Wedja Bali takes a more architectural approach — blending modern design with traditional Indonesian materials. A cafe that is truly Indonesian and celebrates all things Indonesia.

Natural stone and wood
Open, pavilion-style layout
Inspired by Balinese spatial planning
It doesn’t replicate tradition — it evolves it.
👉 Explore: wedjabali.com
🌊 5. Series Coffee Roasters – Sanur (Subtle Local Influence)

Series Coffee Roasters is more understated — but still grounded in local design language.
Warm wood tones
Open airflow layouts
Minimalist but tropical
It reflects how Bali’s café culture is evolving — quieter, softer, and more connected to its environment.
👉 Explore: instagram.com/seriescoffeeroasters
🌿 Why these spaces matter
Across all of these cafés, there’s a shared philosophy:
Architecture built for climate, not just aesthetics
Materials that age and tell stories
Spaces designed for connection, not just consumption
In a place like Bali — where trends move fast — these cafés slow everything down.
If you want to feel like you’re truly in Indonesia,don’t just look for good coffee — look for good spaces.
Start with a quiet sunset at the traditional gladak at Copy House,watch the light change over the ocean,and you’ll understand the difference immediately.



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