Shannon Bennett shakes up Byron with a new coastal dining precinct, The Belongil.
Shannon Bennett shakes up Byron with a new coastal dining precinct, The Belongil.

Why stop at one restaurant when you can create an entire precinct? Acclaimed Aussie chef Shannon Bennett has done exactly that, unveiling The Belongil, a multi-level, four-venue dining destination set to redefine Byron Bay.
Partnering with neighbour and long-time friend Glen Norman, the duo has pooled a cool $10 million into the project, bringing food, art, architecture and community together.

For this full-scale hospitality takeover, Shannon arrives with a tour de force of culinary talent in tow. Long-time collaborators Cory Campbell, Ryan Henley, Steven Kirkpatrick and Carlos Simoes Santos, all alumni of Shannon’s famous Melbourne restaurant, Vue de monde, form the backbone of the kitchens, each adding their own flavour to the mix.
The precinct also unites an impressive roll call of artists and designers, including Nik Karalis, Lee Brennan, Jack Bailey, Otis Hope Carey, Alex Pole, GRIT Studio, Andrew Trewern and Sam Gordon. Together, they have helped create an environment where art and dining collide, from incorporating recycled timbers from a 300-year-old Japanese temple to AI immersion toilets into the design. Yes, even the bathroom becomes part of the experience, with a toilet that responds to your voice and delivers a tailored soundscape aimed at lifting your mood!

At the heart of The Belongil is a commitment to local produce. Shannon and his team have travelled up and down the east coast, meeting fishers, farmers and makers, giving farm-to-table a whole new meaning.
Like any good series, the openings of these four venues are being rolled out slowly over December. Here’s what to expect, venue by venue.

The Kiosk
Open early for dawn-patrol surfers and sandy-feet foodies, The Kiosk delivers streetside eats designed to fuel your morning. Kickstart your day with St ALi coffee and grab-and-go snacks, or linger over breakfast jars like chia pudding topped with coconut yoghurt, berries and cacao nibs. Savoury lunch options include turmeric and ginger–poached chicken with barley, cucumber, cos and almond dukkha. There are also smoothies, burgers, and possibly Byron’s bougiest vending machine, stocked with takeaway matcha, iced teas, elixirs and breakfast bars.

Belongil Bistro
For those who want to stay a while, the Bistro welcomes you in, shoes or not. Built with reclaimed materials and shaped by community, the space is grounded in sustainability and designed for long lunches that effortlessly drift into evening soirees. Expect dishes like Dan Fleming’s spanner crab cocktail, Moran Family Farm lamb leg cooked in kelp and clay for 12 hours, and irresistible desserts like vanilla and yuzu soufflé with raspberry ice cream.
FEU
FEU (French for fire) is Shannon’s passion project. This is fine dining, Byron-style, with a choose-your-own-adventure experience where multi-course ingredient-focused menus blur the line between creativity and cuisine. As Bennett puts it: “Every ingredient on this menu has a story. We’ve stood in the dirt, by the ocean, or in the shed with the people who make it possible. We know them, we trust them, and we want you to taste that connection.”

Blind Tiger
Named after a secret bar in New York during 19th-century American prohibition, Blind Tiger takes on a new form here as a hidden, members-only sanctuary. Details are scarce, but inside looks like an upturned boat, and you’re only allowed entry if you know a local who’s on the guest list. Bennett and Norman’s shared love of music, rare spirits and deep conversations takes centre stage here, and leaves us wanting more.
Where: 33–35 Childe Street, Byron Bay, NSW
When: Times vary for each venue.
Words by Lisette Drew