A real fireplace in a Melbourne cafe is rare — most modern fit-outs run gas heating only and the heritage buildings that kept their chimneys are mostly used by pubs, not cafes. Berwick has a small number of cafes and casual bars where you can sit near a working fire on a wet afternoon. Here’s where to look, what to expect when you walk in, and how to use the strip in winter.
Where the Fireplace Cafes Cluster
In Berwick, the fireplace cafe story follows the building stock. The older brick or weatherboard shops along High Street Berwick Village and Clyde Road are the higher-probability venues — those buildings were built before central heating was standard and a few still have working hearths or gas-converted equivalents. The character of Berwick matters here: Wilson Botanic Park gets fog on still mornings through June and July, which is why a fireplace seat is a meaningful part of a cafe afternoon rather than just a nice-to-have.
Newer cafes in glass-fronted retail formats (the type you see in Westfield and Lakeside-style centres) almost never have fires. The exceptions are the boutique fit-outs in converted houses or older shops, where an operator has chosen to install a gas fire as part of the design. These are the most reliable bet — they were built deliberately for cold-weather sitting.
What to Look For Before You Commit
Three signs a cafe has a real fire:
- The smell of woodsmoke or gas at the door
- Visible fireplace stack or chimney on the building exterior
- Booked-out tables near the back wall even on weekday afternoons — locals know the warm seats
In a outer-south-east suburb like Berwick, the cafe-with-fire experience is more often a small bar or wine bar that operates cafe-style during the day. Look for the venues with fewer than 30 seats, an exposed brick or timber interior, and a counter that runs both coffee and wine. These are the spots most likely to be running a fire — they’re set up for slow afternoons rather than fast brunch turnover.
Wine Bars That Function as Cafes
The most reliable place to find a fire in Berwick on a cold afternoon is a small bar that opens from late morning rather than a cafe in the strict sense. These venues often run all-day food, have a small fire or wood-style heater in the back room, and stay open through the dead 3pm–5pm hour when most cafes have shut.
What to order: a glass of red, a board of cheese or charcuterie, and something hot — a soup or a pasta. Most operate on a $40–$60-per-head spend for a long afternoon. The wine list is usually 8–12 by the glass and 30–60 by the bottle, with a strong Victorian and South Australian focus. If you want to sit for two hours with a book and a glass, this is the room type.
What’s Around in Berwick
When you’re picking a fireplace cafe afternoon, it helps to know what’s nearby: Wilson Botanic Park on Princes Highway, Berwick Village on High Street, Eden Rise Shopping Centre. Pair a long warm cafe session with a walk to one of these and you’ve made a half-day out of a cold afternoon. The walk between cafe and anchor is part of the experience — a 10-minute walk in 9°C drizzle followed by a fireplace seat is the Berwick winter Saturday at its best.
Transport in is straightforward: no trams; bus 893 and 894 across Berwick; Berwick station on the Pakenham line. Most public transport runs through to about midnight on weekends; off-peak frequencies after 8pm are sparser, so plan the trip home.
When the Fire Is Lit
The fire in most Berwick cafes runs from late May through to early September, weather-permitting. The pattern: lit from about 11am, going strong through to 4pm or 5pm, banked or extinguished in the evening for cafes that close at 5pm. For wine bars and small bars that stay open later, the fire often runs through to 9pm or 10pm.
The best fireplace seats are usually claimed by 1pm on a cold Saturday. Mid-week, they’re available all afternoon — Tuesday and Wednesday between 2pm and 4pm is the sweet spot for a quiet hour with the warm seat to yourself.
Calling Ahead Saves the Trip
Most Berwick cafes don’t have fires; the ones that do tend to be either heritage-building venues or converted-house operators. Before you walk 15 minutes in 8°C drizzle, ring and ask: “Is the fire on this afternoon?” Operators are happy to tell you. According to a 2024 piece in Broadsheet on Melbourne’s winter cafe culture, the cafes running fires are increasingly making it part of their winter marketing — they want the cold-day customer.
What This Means for You
For a winter cafe afternoon in Berwick with the genuine fireplace experience: walk High Street Berwick Village and Clyde Road between 2pm and 5pm, look for the older shopfronts with visible stacks or chimneys, and choose the smaller independents over the chains. Bring a book. Don’t rush. If the strip cafes are full or fireless, switch to a small bar or wine bar — they’re often the more reliable winter pick anyway.
For more, see winter pubs in Berwick, the best ramen and soup in Berwick and indoor things to do in Berwick this winter.
Tom Hartigan writes about Melbourne’s outer-south-east suburbs for MELBZ.
