Sunday night. Downtown Vancouver. My son had booked a table for two at Notch8, the signature restaurant at the Fairmont Hotel Vancouver. We called ahead. Jasprit, the hostess, confirmed availability. At 9:40 PM sharp, we took the elevator down less than two minutes from room to restaurant. We were expecting a full dinner in one of the city’s supposed top-tier dining spots. What we got was a polite message. The dinner menu was already closed. Just like that.

A five-star hotel… closing the kitchen?
Yes, at 9:45 PM, the kitchen in this grand hotel, the Fairmont, no less had stopped taking orders for dinner. From 10 PM onward, diners get a lounge menu so minimal you could memorize it in one glance. The feeling was clear: the kitchen had called it a night. Not a single course would come out of it again that evening. Let’s be honest. This wasn’t just disappointing. It was baffling. Our reservation had been accepted, our table was waiting, but the chef was gone or might as well have been.
Great service, tiny menu, bad soup
Jacob, our waiter, was excellent. Sharp, informed, and professional. He worked with what he had, explained the limited offerings, and kept service standards high. But even the best staff can’t create a dining experience when the kitchen refuses to play ball.
We tried to make the most of it. A few bar snacks, some wine. The tomato soup, however, was a complete failure dense, overloaded with cream, and unpleasant to the point of being inedible. It was the kind of dish that says, “we’re done for the night, and so is our effort.”
Even the manager agreed
I spoke with the manager, Katherine. And to her credit, she agreed. She’s originally from Hong Kong and admitted that when she moved to Vancouver, she was stunned by the rigid 10 PM kitchen cutoffs even in hotels. In Hong Kong, a five-star hotel restaurant doesn’t roll down the shutters before midnight. It serves you when you’re hungry. That’s the job.
Dubai has spoiled us for choice
As someone who has lived in Dubai for over three decades, I couldn’t help but compare. In the UAE, the city comes alive at night. You can sit down at 11:00 PM in a Michelin-starred spot and be greeted with a full tasting menu. Popular local restaurants, and scores of others serve fresh, hot food until 3 AM. And it’s not junk food, it’s proper food, well-executed and served with pride.
Cafés are full of people working, catching up, or unwinding over dessert until the early hours. Even fast-casual outlets buzz with energy. You don’t get the sense that the city is winding down. You feel like it’s still ramping up.
Other cities get it too
Dubai isn’t an outlier. Cities like Paris, Barcelona, Rome, late dinner is the norm. In Rome, people don’t even think about sitting down for dinner until 9 PM. In Madrid, that’s practically early. In Paris, 10 PM bookings at fine restaurants are expected, not frowned upon.
Even in North America, New York sets the standard. You can order duck confit or sushi at midnight and still feel like you’re part of the evening. In LA, West Hollywood and Koreatown stay lit. The scene continues until 2 or 3 AM, with full kitchens in motion. The energy never really dips.
So why does Vancouver switch off?
Vancouver is one of the most beautiful cities on earth. The mountain views, the fresh air, the clean streets unbeatable. But when it comes to food culture, especially at night, the city hits the brakes too early. This isn’t about expecting 24-hour service. It’s about a five-star hotel restaurant being unable or unwilling to serve dinner after 9:45 PM. That’s not world-class. That’s small town with a luxury price tag.
Tourists notice. Travelers compare.
For international travelers used to round-the-clock cities, this kind of experience isn’t just inconvenient it’s a letdown. Cities don’t just compete with each other on weather, skyline or natural beauty. They compete on vibe, energy, and how well they serve people living life outside the 9-to-5 box. Dinner isn’t just a meal. It’s often the highlight of a trip. It’s a celebration, a reset, a conversation. And in cities that understand this, the doors don’t close when the sun goes down.
The bigger message: Hospitality means availability
If Vancouver wants to stand beside the world’s great cities, it needs to act like one. And that starts with hospitality. That means staying open, being flexible, and adapting to the fact that not everyone eats dinner at 7 PM. Some people travel. Some work late. Some want a meal after a show, a flight, or a long day of exploring.
The city already has the views, the nature, the charm. Now it needs the energy. And that energy doesn’t clock out at 10 PM. Notch8 may sit in a heritage hotel, but on this night, it felt like it belonged to a city stuck in a much earlier time. The luxury tag didn’t match the experience. Until Vancouver’s dining culture catches up with the cities it claims to compete with, this won’t be the last time visitors leave the table disappointed.
Author
Ajay Rajguru is the Founder & CEO of MENA Newswire, with ventures including Newszy, Integrated Identity, ConSynSer, and CryptoWire. A digital media entrepreneur focused on AI-driven content, ad-tech, and emerging markets, he is also an active global investor across equities, real estate, and alternative assets. He writes occasionally on business, travel, and the evolving intersection of media and technology.