From a Wenzhounese immigrant family rebuilding from nothing to the bar stations trusted by top venues worldwide. This is how it happened.
Yu returned from Shanghai to help his family recover after they lost the restaurant they had built over more than a decade. He started working behind bars and in restaurants, taking any shift available.
Every bar had the same problems. Shallow, poorly insulated ice wells. Speed rails bolted on as afterthoughts. Glass rinsers positioned in awkward spots that broke the natural flow of service. Bartenders were fighting their equipment every single shift, and everyone accepted it.
Yu could not. Every wasted step was time. Every awkward reach was fatigue. Every poorly designed station was money left on the table — and the idea for Kobayashi was born.
Every design decision starts with how a bartender actually moves during a rush and ends with the guest's experience. Three principles shape every station we build.
"Existing bar equipment was designed by people who manufactured metal, not by people who poured drinks."
The first Kobayashi prototype was not pretty. It was rough, overbuilt, and heavier than it needed to be. But it worked — and it proved the concept was sound.
Yu tested it in real bar environments. He watched bartenders use it during actual service. He measured the difference in speed, in steps taken, in how quickly drinks moved from station to guest. A purpose-built station designed around natural bartender movement was measurably faster than a conventional setup.
Manufacturing in America was a deliberate choice. Shorter lead times for domestic orders, direct oversight of quality control, and the ability to respond quickly when a client needs a custom modification.
Every station is fabricated from 304 stainless steel. Ice chests insulated with 3/4-inch closed-cell foam. Every drain, glass rinser, and speed rail pre-installed before the station ships. When it arrives, it is ready to install.
Kobayashi was built the long way — behind the bar, through the maze. These numbers tell part of the story.
The maze in our logo is a reminder that complexity, when navigated with patience and intention, leads to simplicity. A bartender steps up to a Kobayashi and everything is where it should be.
Every station includes a 1-hour bar design consulting session. We will help you spec the right model for your space and service style.