Rey de Copas

$$

A converted Palermo Soho mansion where Paez Vilaro canvases hang over barrel aged Negronis, recognized by the city as a Site of Cultural Interest.

Rey de Copas has poured signature cocktails under serious art at Gorriti 5176 since 2012. The Palermo Soho mansion hangs works by Sebastian Paez Vilaro and Carlos Paez Vilaro across its rooms, and the Buenos Aires city government counts the bar among its declared Sites of Cultural Interest, a status SalPimenta covered as a rare honor for a working bar.

The rooms move from white walled gallery to Moroccan lounge to open terrace, with chandeliers and dark beams holding the light low. Yelp logs the address, the long weekend hours, and a steady stream of visitors who come as much for the house as the glass.

This is the Palermo stop for drinkers who want the room to matter. Pure cocktail obsessives should order with care; the classics outperform the seasonal list here.

The house spreads across distinct spaces: airy gallery rooms, a darker main bar under wooden beams, and a terrace that Tripadvisor reviewers single out on warm nights. French and Moroccan decor, ornate chandeliers, and rotating art keep each visit slightly different.

Difford's Guide flags two barrel aged builds as the constants: a Negroni and a Rob Roy, both rounded by the wood. The house list changes seasonally and divides opinion; more than one Tripadvisor reviewer calls the lighter house cocktails watery. Start with the barrel aged Negroni, then let the bartenders steer the second round.

Early evenings draw an art and dinner crowd; after midnight on weekends the terrace and front rooms fill with the Palermo Soho bar circuit. Service draws consistent praise on Tripadvisor, even from reviewers who knock the seasonal drinks.

The most atmospheric big room in Palermo Soho. Come for the house and the art, order from the barrel, and save the seasonal list for a second visit.

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