

Like any good Tiki bar finding us will not be easy. So we welcome you to come escape to our little slice of paradise in Harvard Square. Wusong Road is a Tiki bar where we thoughtfully match Asian American restaurant affordability, plush mid-century modern comfort-ability, top it off with a splash of rum and good old fashioned hospitality. Our aesthetic is tropical and has been inspired by trips to Asia, and though we may not have actual ‘Tiki’ carvings in the restaurant, Wusong Road does celebrates the diverse tableau of the Asian American restaurant experience. Wusong Road is not intended to be a ‘political’ or ‘social’ commentary on Tiki culture. These dishes and drinks to me, and to the community, where Chinese, because if anything Chinese food is highly adaptable and will always find a way to serve local tastes. Tiki for many Chinese restaurants was not a craft movement, it was just what guests expected from your local Chinese restaurant and what most of us just grew up with. So ‘Tiki’ drinks and American Chinese food had grew to become Chinese restaurant standards, no one questioned their origins, their providence, or their history. Restaurants were the only opportunity for many Chinese families to make a living in the United States-in many cases working in or opening a Chinese restaurant was the only reason why they were even allowed to come to the United States. Growing up in my parent’s American Chinese restaurant 1990’s (in Malden Massachusetts, in a place on main street called Bobo’s), Scorpion bowls, Pu Pu platters, zombies, Mai Tais’, and Peking ravioli were all the norm (fun story, Peking Ravioli-just regular pork dumplings-got their name so Joyce Chen could offer Chinese food to the Cambridge Italian Immigrant population who did not know anything about Chinese cuisine). Overall Tiki cocktails were primarily rum which was still cheap (and strong) and because Chinese restaurants largely served poor immigrant and worker populations there was a demand for a low price of drink. Though we may think of Chinese restaurants now being largely ‘take-away’ or fast food style restaurants, in the 70s and 80s many Chinese restaurants still had lounges or bars and found it easy to pair ‘Tiki’ drinks with their food. During the 1980s through the 2000s American Chinese restaurants became the stewards of Tiki drinks during a period when Tiki culture, music and art largely faded from popularity (until the ‘craft’ TIki movement of the early 2000s). Wusong Road wants to tell the story of Tiki during the 1970s through present day, where there was a strong and largely unspoken connection between tropical fruit forward cocktails, the Tiki or ‘Polynesian’ aesthetic and American Chinese restaurants (even at Don the Beachcomber’s restaurant he famously served ‘exotic’ food which was just Cantonese food with pineapple). Tiki is now seen by many as a problematic vestige of colonial nostalgia, with it’s popularity largely fading from the American psyche in the 1970s through early 2000s. TIki also acted as a form of nostalgia for the G.I.s who returned from World War II who may have spent time recovering from injuries in Hawaii or had fond memories of the Tropics during their time abroad. Rums were cheaper than whisky or gin and thus far more affordable for middleclass Americans. In the 1950’s and 1960’s Tiki was celebrated as a tropical escapism at an affordable price. Let’s be up-front with Tiki and Tiki culture. We welcome you to escape with us and enjoy a little taste of tropical paradise in the heart of Cambridge. Our our Tiki inspired beverage program has been carefully crafted by lead bartender Matthew Tetrault and the awesome Wusong bar team. Our hospitality experience is curated by restaurant manager John Shin and service manager Zoe Garrett.

With a lush atmosphere and curated Asian American inspired small plates by Chef owner Jason Doo, Chefs Sergio Enqriuez and Diana Reza. Wusong Road tells the culinary love story about Asian American Cuisine and tropical Tiki escapism that was central to Cambridge Massachusetts (home of the ‘Peking Ravioli’). We are hidden away in the outskirts of Harvard Square in America’s first train (‘Conductors’) building and Wusong Road is named after the first train building located in Wusong China (located just outside of Chef Jason’s family’s hometown of Shanghai). Hidden away in the historic 100 year old Conductor’s Building in Harvard Square.
