Real fireplaces in Melbourne cafes are rarer than you’d think — most operators run efficient gas heating rather than wood or open flame, and council planning rules around chimneys make new fireplace installs expensive. Frankston has a small but real cluster of fire-equipped cafes and small bars, mostly in heritage buildings with original chimneys still functional. Here’s where to find them.
The Main Cafe Strip
Frankston’s cafe density runs heaviest along Nepean Highway and the surrounding cross-streets. Wells street and the frankston foreshore hold the bulk of the eating. The cafes here are a mix of:
- Heritage shopfront conversions (potential for original chimneys)
- Newer renovations (heated rooms but no fires)
- Warehouse and industrial conversions (sometimes with added wood-burning stoves)
For real fires, the heritage shopfronts and the warehouse conversions are usually the best targets — newer renovations rarely justify the cost of installing a chimney.
What Makes Frankston Different
Frankston is the southeastern coastal hub — beachfront, bay views, a working town with a growing arts and food scene, plus access to mornington peninsula. The cafe culture here reflects the suburb’s character — slower or busier depending on the strip, with a particular crowd that the operators have learned to serve.
For winter cafe afternoons, what matters more than the fireplace count is:
- How long the cafe lets you sit — some operators move people on after an hour, others don’t
- Heating quality — efficient gas can outperform a half-hearted fire
- Food beyond brunch — winter cafes that run lunch and afternoon menus give you a full-day option
The Frankston cafes that run all three of these are the strongest cold-day picks, even when they don’t have a real fire.
Small Bars That Function as Cafes
Frankston has a small cluster of natural-wine and craft-beer bars that operate cafe-style during the day and bar-style after 5pm. A few of these have working fireplaces or wood-burning stoves — the kind of venue that runs a fire on a Sunday afternoon and leaves it going through the early evening.
Look for venues with:
- Smaller, 30–50 seat layouts
- Exposed brick or original chimney stacks
- A counter that runs both espresso and wine
- An afternoon transition from cafe to bar (4pm–6pm window)
These rooms hold heat properly and have the slow-pace culture that justifies a 2-hour fireplace afternoon.
Bakery and Wood-Oven Alternatives
A few Frankston bakeries and pizza-oven cafes don’t have fireplaces in the strict sense but generate radiant heat from working ovens. The back of the room near the oven is genuinely warm, the bread or pastries are typically fresher than at standard cafes, and the operator culture is usually slow-paced enough to let you stay.
These are often better Saturday-morning options than the smaller fireplace cafes that book out fast.
What to Look For When Walking In
Three signs a cafe has a real fire:
- The smell of woodsmoke at the entrance (gas fires are quieter on the nose but still warm)
- Visible chimney stack on the building exterior — heritage buildings still have them
- Booked-out tables in the back even on a slow Tuesday afternoon — locals know the warm corners
Most Frankston cafes don’t run real fires; the ones that do tend to be either heritage venues or operator-driven small bars. Calling ahead is the way to confirm whether the fire’s lit on a given day.
Practical Notes
- Transit: Frankston station (terminus of the Frankston line), plus extensive bus connections
- Best timing: 11am–2pm weekdays for reliable seats; weekends arrive 8.30am or book
- Walk distances: most cafe clusters are within 500m of a tram stop or station
What This Means for You
For a Frankston cafe afternoon with the genuine fireplace experience: prioritise heritage shopfronts on Nepean Highway or small wine-bar cafes in the side streets. The chain-the-cafes approach (multiple stops across the afternoon) often beats hunting for the single perfect fireplace. The bakeries with working ovens are an underrated alternative — same warmth, better food.
For more, see winter pubs in Frankston and indoor things to do in Frankston this winter.
Jack Carver writes about Melbourne’s suburbs for MELBZ.
