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A mega three-storey pub gets liftoff in Malvern. Here’s what you need to know

On a prominent site that connects the south-east, the Angel of Malvern’s public bar opens this weekend, with a wine-diner and listening bar to come.

Emily Holgate

In a win for Melbourne’s inner south-east, the 170-year-old Angel of Malvern pub is pouring beers again this weekend following a monumental six-month overhaul. The ground-floor public bar is the first of three venues being rolled out at the former Angel Tavern this year under new hospitality group Refinery, owned by property developer Kokoda.

After years of being starved of elevated watering holes, locals are finally seeing a shift. Between the resurrection of The Angel and Australian Venue Co’s 2024 overhaul of the Gardiner Hotel, the area’s latest addition is poised to be its biggest drawcard yet.

The Angel of Malvern is reopening after a six-month refurbishment.Wayne Taylor

“The goal is for it to feel like a proper local again, somewhere people return to regularly, but now with a pull that extends well beyond the neighbourhood,” says Mark Stevens, Refinery Group’s founder and managing director.

Gone are the dull green carpets and dated fitout of its former life as a pokies pub. The gaming room has been restored, but the focus has otherwise shifted to drinking and dining across the sprawling space.

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Melbourne design firm Studio McCue installed a six-metre glass-ceilinged atrium, a beer garden featuring a festival-sized screen, and a swish new dining room adjoining the public bar that retains original brickwork and windows while tying in concrete and recycled timber.

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“It’s quite a strong masculine building, so we’ve tried to keep that integrity,” Stevens says.

Triple-cooked chips are made from scratch.
1 / 10Triple-cooked chips are made from scratch.Wayne Taylor
An atrium with a six-metre glass ceiling brings plenty of light into the venue.
2 / 10An atrium with a six-metre glass ceiling brings plenty of light into the venue.Wayne Taylor
Free-range chicken parma, brined, crumbed and fried in-house, with smoked ham and house sugo.
3 / 10Free-range chicken parma, brined, crumbed and fried in-house, with smoked ham and house sugo.Wayne Taylor
Angel's negroni is part of the extensive cocktail list.
4 / 10Angel's negroni is part of the extensive cocktail list.Wayne Taylor
House-baked focaccia is served with dips or charcuterie.
5 / 10House-baked focaccia is served with dips or charcuterie.Wayne Taylor
The enclosed beer garden features a 400-centimetre screen.
6 / 10The enclosed beer garden features a 400-centimetre screen.Wayne Taylor
Ginger sticky date pudding with Starward whisky caramel sauce.
7 / 10Ginger sticky date pudding with Starward whisky caramel sauce.Wayne Taylor
The Sweet Talk cocktail with Naught sangiovese gin, ume plum, blackberry and citrus.
8 / 10The Sweet Talk cocktail with Naught sangiovese gin, ume plum, blackberry and citrus.Wayne Taylor
Recycled timber floors replaced old carpets.
9 / 10Recycled timber floors replaced old carpets.Wayne Taylor
Kokoda's Mark Stevens (left) and executive chef Justin North.
10 / 10Kokoda's Mark Stevens (left) and executive chef Justin North.Alura Lane

Executive chef Justin North, former owner of Sydney’s Becasse and an alumnus of Michelin-starred venues in Britain, has crafted a menu of pub classics and small plates, executed by head chef Josh Rudd (ex-HER in Melbourne CBD). It’s familiar territory but with a level of rigour that takes the offering beyond typical pub grub.

Fish is line-caught and sourced daily from two suppliers, Red Coral Seafood and Ocean Made. Free-range chicken schnitzels are cut, brined and crumbed in-house, served with potato puree and tarragon gravy. Sticky date pudding is heady with ginger, finished with a caramel sauce spiked with Melbourne-made Starward whisky. Pillowy house-baked focaccia bolsters dips and charcuterie, while the standard bowl of chips is anything but: these are made from scratch and triple-fried.

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“It was about coming back to creating a beautiful neighbourhood venue, offering a menu that was approachable and not too clever,” North says. “It’s food that goes with drinking.”

An atrium with a six-metre glass ceiling brings plenty of light into the venue.Wayne Taylor

Thirty-two taps pour favourites such as Stone & Wood’s Pacific ale, Balter XPA and Carlton Draught; a house Angel Lager, brewed in collaboration with Reservoir’s Hawkers brewery; and tap cocktails including a yuzu margarita.

Come winter, the group will unveil Mediterranean-inspired wine bar Flores on the first floor and late-night cocktail and listening bar Lately on the second to round out the venue’s trifecta.

The gleaming white corner pub anchors the colossal $450 million Malvern Collective, a residential development completed by Kokoda last September. Positioned at the junction of Glenferrie and Dandenong roads, this “lifestyle destination” comprises two glass towers with more than 200 apartments rising above a ground-floor retail precinct.

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Kokoda also recently acquired St Kilda’s Saint Hotel — previously associated with Public Hospitality Group and chef Karen Martini — which is slated to open later this year.

The Angel of Malvern opens on Friday, April 24, at 641 Dandenong Road, Malvern.

Open lunch and dinner daily

theangelofmalvern.com.au

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Emily HolgateEmily HolgateEmily is a producer for the Good Food App at The Age. She previously wrote for the likes of Broadsheet and Urban List.Connect via email.

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