Imagine walking down 7th Avenue in Manhattan’s Garment District—horns blaring, people buzzing, the city in its full chaotic glory—and then stumbling into a 900-square-foot haven called Sopo. You’ve just entered a Korean fast-casual joint that hits different. This isn’t just food.
It’s a cultural remix of heritage, design, and pure chef wizardry that’s somehow packaged into what feels like a luxury dosirak dropped in the heart of NYC.
Let’s start with the star of the show: the food. Chef Dennis Hong (yes, that Dennis Hong of Jean Georges and Le Bernardin cred) delivers Korean dishes that make your taste buds feel like they’re front row at a Michelin show—except everything’s under 20 bucks. Think “small packages that bring joy” (aka the meaning of Sopo), dishing out everything from elevated bulgogi to kimchi with a backstory. It’s comfort food with couture-level finesse. It tastes like home, only better, and somehow cosmopolitan.
But here’s where it gets extra: the space. Designed by architecture rebels Model Practice, this isn’t your typical grab-and-go joint with fluorescent lighting and sad chairs. They took inspo straight from the Korean dosirak—those neatly packed lunch trays with compartments—and transformed it into a full-on architectural metaphor.
Picture a sculptural box floating above the dining area, mirroring the organization of a dosirak. Each section plays a role, just like every side dish in your banchan lineup. It’s giving minimalism meets meaning.
This box isn’t just eye candy. It’s functional. Its sleek outer shell reflects the city outside, grounding the design in its urban context, while the inside is lined with acoustic plaster to cancel out the surrounding chaos. Translation: you’re sitting in Midtown Manhattan, but it feels like a serene Seoul alleyway.
And the whole vibe? It’s thoughtful, intentional, and low-key genius. Model Practice, a bi-coastal firm with a rep for pushing boundaries, didn’t just drop a trendy look here. They layered heritage with design logic, making the experience richer than your uncle’s secret jjajangmyeon recipe. The furniture is chic (shoutout Normann Copenhagen), the branding is clean (Ordinary People snapped), and even the lighting hits just right (courtesy of Coronet and RBW). Every piece is curated like a Spotify playlist for your senses.
Sopo isn’t playing by the rules of fast-casual. It’s rewriting them. It proves that Korean cuisine doesn’t have to be either mom’s kitchen or a five-star tasting menu. It can live in a sleek capsule of culture, creativity, and soul—right between a dry cleaner and a nail salon on 7th Ave. And with that Architizer A+ Popular Choice award win, the people clearly got the memo.
So next time you’re in Midtown and craving a bite that’s got brains, heritage, and flavor bombs? Pop the lid on Sopo. Trust, it’s not just lunch. It’s a vibe.