VEVE Whitepaper 2026
Heineken turns Keong Saik into a three-storey afterwork escape

Heineken turns Keong Saik into a three-storey afterwork escape

share on

Heineken is turning afterwork drinking into a full-blown experience with the launch of "First sip house", a three-storey pop-up designed to get CBD workers to rethink the moment they clock out. The activation runs from 7 to 16 May 2026 at Keong Saik Road, positioning itself as an afterwork destination where the first sip sets the tone for the night.

The concept follows a recent CBD stunt by Heineken where the brand brought the “first sip forward” through a surprise elevator activation targeting office workers. "First sip house" builds on that idea, stretching it into a physical space that encourages guests to prioritise their first beer over their final email.

Entry is free for guests aged 18 and above, with the experience centred on Heineken’s pure malt, premium quality proposition. Visitors can move through curated food, drink and experiential zones designed to make afterwork feel more intentional, social and immersive.

Don't miss: Heineken unites football, F1 and music under new sponsorship platform

At the core of the pop-up is the "First sip bar", where award-winning mixologist June Baek and culinary creator Justin Hammond return with a new menu of four pairing experiences.

The concept leans into intentional incompletion, with chefs stepping away mid-prep for their own afterwork drink, leaving guests to finish the dishes themselves.


Pairings range from tuna tartare with pure malt crostini matched with a Heineken Original and Omija berry soju bomb, to a mushroom parfait with malt caramel paired with a grapefruit and ginger Heineken Silver spritz.

Other highlights include malted peanut butter soba with a layered malt sour, as well as slow-cooked beef short rib tacos paired with a customisable michelada (Mexican cocktail).

Beyond food and drink, the experience expands into interactive zones built around social play and participation. "Star tap" turns networking into a gamified activity where wristband taps unlock rewards and leaderboard rankings, while "Art jam" offers a free-form creative space for guests to build personalised graffiti-style pieces without rules or structure.


The "Pourfection lounge" shifts focus to craft, where guests are guided through a five-step perfect pour led by draught masters. Participants also get early access to the StarMark glass, a precision-designed glass aimed at enhancing aroma, carbonation and flavour, with successful pourers taking one home while stocks last.

The brand has also been experimenting with city-based experiential formats in other markets recently. In Seoul last year, Heineken rolled out "Rooftop revival", a campaign that transformed unused urban rooftops into social hubs to address what it called the “proximity paradox” of city life, where people live close together but still feel disconnected.

Created by LePub, the activation used satellite imagery to reveal rooftop event locations marked with Heineken’s red star, drawing more than 8,000 applicants. Experiences included a K-pop set by SEVENTEEN’s DINO, a design workshop with artist Cha Inchul, and an interactive tasting led by chef Cho SeoHyeoung.

Each event centred on a red star Pyeong-sang, a modern take on a traditional Korean communal platform redesigned with built-in icebox storage and Bluetooth speakers.

Related articles: 
Heineken opens self-service bars for late-night football fans   
Heineken taps Joe Jonas to ditch social media and pour into real connections   
Heineken creates immersive pop-up music series at unconventional venues

share on

Follow us on our Telegram channel for the latest updates in the marketing and advertising scene.
Follow

Free newsletter

Get the daily lowdown on Asia's top marketing stories.

We break down the big and messy topics of the day so you're updated on the most important developments in Asia's marketing development – for free.

subscribe now open in new window