One of the last truly old school bars in Marrakech: cold beer, smoke off the wood grill, zero pretense.
Bar de L'Escale holds a corner of Rue de Mauritanie in Gueliz and describes itself as one of the last traditional bars in Marrakech. Local guides back the claim; the Souk Facil Gueliz guide names it one of the oldest bars in the city, known for grillades cooked over a wood fire. Nothing about the room has been designed in decades, and that is the point.
The format is fixed: order beer, order brochettes, stay a while. Evendo's Gueliz bar roundup calls it a cozy fixture where kebab and beer come at affordable prices, and Restaurant Guru's aggregated reviews repeat the same pairing.
Who would hate it? Anyone wanting cocktails, decor, or a wine list. This is a workingman's bar that happens to grill better than most restaurants nearby.
Expect a plain salle with tiled floors, packed tables, and the grill working at the back; the smoke is the room's perfume. The crowd is overwhelmingly local and male, in the tradition of Morocco's old city bars, and visitors who treat it with respect get the same fast service as the regulars. Daylight hours feel like a canteen; evenings turn louder as the tables fill.
Order a cold Casablanca or Flag with a round of lamb or kefta brochettes off the wood fire; that combination built the bar's reputation, per the Souk Facil guide and Restaurant Guru reviews. The grilled chicken earns equal billing. Skip anything that is not grilled; the kitchen does one thing and does it properly.
This is a neighborhood institution, not a tourist stop, and the room runs on regulars from lunch through closing. Solo travelers comfortable in old school bars do fine; groups expecting table service and English menus do not. Wanderlog reviewers flag it as a genuine slice of everyday Marrakech.