How did Livio Lauro’s early experience inspire the creation of EuroBar Station?
At 13, Livio Lauro, the founder of EuroBar Station, watched a bartender craft a Shirley Temple; the fizz rising through red syrup, crowned with a maraschino cherry, and something clicked. That glimpse of theater, precision, and hospitality sparked a fascination with bar design that never left him.
For years, however, the idea simmered on the back burner. Family responsibilities and a demanding beverage hospitality career kept it on hold. It took the global lockdown of 2020 to create the pause he had never allowed himself. In his garage, Lauro began building wooden prototypes, rethinking how a bar station could function if designed entirely around the bartender’s workflow. And by 2021, those prototypes evolved into EuroBar, a “pandemic baby” built to elevate the art of bartending through design that works as beautifully as it looks.
Turning Experience into Systems
How does EuroBar translate bartending experience into modular cocktail station systems?
EuroBar operates as a hospitality-focused manufacturer of premium cocktail stations and bar equipment. Drawing on Lauro’s decades behind the bar, it develops modular systems that balance aesthetics, efficiency, and adaptability.
Its flagship Classico™ station and the compact Sportivo™ unit anchor a product line designed for a wide range of venues. From white-tablecloth restaurants and cocktail-forward bars to hotels, casinos, coffee shops, and hybrid all-day concepts. The goal? To create stations that can transition from morning espresso service to late-night cocktails without structural overhauls or operational friction.
Classico™ embodies that philosophy. Traditional bar layouts typically position ice bins and speed rails directly in front of the bartender, forcing constant reach and cluttering the visual field. EuroBar reimagined this arrangement. In the Classico™, ice and bottles shift to the right, juices and sodas to the left, leaving the space directly in front as a dedicated prep zone. Built-in trash chutes, garnish compartments, tool storage, towel nooks, and open workspace replace the chaotic scene of a typical bar top. For staff, this promotes speed, consistency, and focus during peak service. For guests, it delivers a clean, intentional visual environment.
“A well-built bar ensures unsightly but necessary things needed for proper beverage service go unnoticed by the guests, while offering a seamless experience,” says Lauro.
Unlike kitchens, which vary depending on cuisine, most bars rely on the same foundational elements, including ice, bottles, glassware, and prep space. EuroBar stations use adaptable surface and cabinetry systems that operators can configure based on footprint and service style. This flexibility enables venues to evolve without rebuilding from scratch.
For high-volume or space-constrained areas, the Sportivo™ is the perfect solution. Often positioned at the short ends of L- or U-shaped bars, it mirrors the Classico’s™ height, cabinetry, and finishes to maintain visual continuity. Working together, the two stations allow venues to divide guest-facing hospitality from production-heavy output while preserving a cohesive aesthetic.
Ergonomics for Longevity
Why are ergonomics and workflow efficiency central to EuroBar station design?
Ergonomics underpins every design decision. EuroBar raised its stations by two inches to reduce bending and unnecessary turning. Soda gun nozzles are positioned upright rather than angled downward, minimizing wrist strain over long shifts. These refinements may appear subtle, but they are designed for longevity behind the bar and visual appeal in front of it.
How has EuroBar expanded its product line and global manufacturing presence?
What began as a single prototype has expanded into more than 50 products spanning underbars, back-bars, and refrigeration. With manufacturing in Fort Smith, Arkansas, and Poland, EuroBar now supports growth across North America, Europe, and Dubai.
Yet, the company remains anchored to that early spark of inspiration. EuroBar does not just make equipment; it engineers the invisible architecture of hospitality. By refining what happens behind the bar, it shapes what guests ultimately remember, effortless service, intentional design, and the quiet confidence of a system built to perform.
Thank you for Subscribing to Hospitality Business Review Weekly Brief
I agree We use cookies on this website to enhance your user experience. By clicking any link on this page you are giving your consent for us to set cookies. More info
However, if you would like to share the information in this article, you may use the link below:
https://www.hospitalitybusinessrevieweurope.com/eurobar-station-2026
