If I owned a mall, I wouldn't allow restaurants to turn common areas with high foot traffic into kusinas.
I find it uncivilized. I don't like walking into people having a feast and I don't like people walking into me while I'm eating.
What is the point of creating small store spaces and allowing tenants to just spill over to the walking area?
Whatever happened to the luxury of space?
Nowadays all malls just have carinderic areas.
Take a look at alternative ways to accommodate extra seating in malls with still a bit of privacy.
Ajisen at Langham Place mall, Hong Kong has a cute barricade—you can still see the diners, but not the food they're eating.
Right next to it is a restaurant that has an open area but enclosed seating
Same mall, check out the barricade at the Match-Too Café
In Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia there's classy outdoor dining at the mall
Looks so rich, not carinderic
Sana tayo rin.
I find it uncivilized. I don't like walking into people having a feast and I don't like people walking into me while I'm eating.
What is the point of creating small store spaces and allowing tenants to just spill over to the walking area?
Whatever happened to the luxury of space?
Nowadays all malls just have carinderic areas.
Take a look at alternative ways to accommodate extra seating in malls with still a bit of privacy.
Ajisen at Langham Place mall, Hong Kong has a cute barricade—you can still see the diners, but not the food they're eating.
Right next to it is a restaurant that has an open area but enclosed seating
Same mall, check out the barricade at the Match-Too Café
In Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia there's classy outdoor dining at the mall
Looks so rich, not carinderic
Sana tayo rin.