Best Outdoor Dining Burgers Restaurants in Downtown LA
3 hand-picked restaurants, critic-reviewed and ranked
Last Updated: February 2026
Our Top Pick
Bike Shed Moto Co - Los Angeles
A full-scale restaurant embedded inside a genuine moto social club.
Notable Picks
A 30,000 sq-ft moto-culture destination where the converted 1945 warehouse, vintage motorcycles on the floor, and club-like energy are the main attraction—food takes a supporting role. The modern American menu delivers solid burgers (the bone marrow truffle burger stands out) and a strong brunch spread, though portions and prices run toward destination-dining territory. Works best as a social gathering spot where the spectacle and sprawling lounge seating carry the experience.
Must-Try Dishes:
Bike Shed Burger, Steak & Eggs, Breakfast Burrito
What Makes it Special: A full-scale restaurant embedded inside a genuine moto social club.
Worthy Picks
7.9
Vibes:
Happy Hour Hotspots
Group Dining Gatherings
Outdoor Dining Oasis
Business Lunch Power Players
A whisky-forward New American bar and grill anchored by technique-driven comfort food—the seven-hour bolognese on pappardelle is the signature move, backed by a deep brown spirits library that elevates the standard downtown lunch-and-drinks formula. The room stays conversation-friendly even at capacity, making it a reliable staging ground for pre-show groups and business lunches near the Historic Core. Expect solid bar-and-grill pricing without standout value, but the kitchen execution holds up across a broad menu.
Must-Try Dishes:
Seven Hour Bolognese, Buttermilk Crispy Chicken Sandwich, Prime Rib French Dip
What Makes it Special: Downtown LA's go-to New American bar and grill with a top-shelf whisky library and seven-hour slow-cooked bolognese on pappardelle
7.9
A compact twelve-item menu that punches well above bar-food expectations — hamachi tostadas and a patty melt that belong on a full-service restaurant ticket, backed by a wine program that gives most Downtown LA dining rooms a run. The indoor-outdoor layout fills up fast on weekends, and the noise level runs hot enough that you're better off leaning into the group energy than planning a quiet conversation.
Must-Try Dishes:
Fries, Biscuits, The Patty Melt
What Makes it Special: A twelve-item menu executed at full-restaurant caliber inside a bar with a wine list that outpaces most LA restaurants