A New Burmese Restaurant to Replace Pieology on 16th Street

The group behind My Burma has signed a lease for the space
burmese restaurant in pieology sacramento 16th st space o1 lofts building
Street view: Google Earth Pro

The Pieology restaurant at 1020 16th St. inside the O1 Lofts building permanently closed earlier this week; thankfully, the space won’t remain vacant for too long. Operators behind Burmeses restaurant My Burma, formerly Burma Eats in Davis Commons, have signed a lease for the space and hope to open by the end of Summer 2024. The upcoming restaurant does not yet have a name.

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Myat Mon, one of the operators, shared that the new restaurant will serve Burmese cuisine with a menu similar to My Burma’s but with a different name. My Burma’s menu specializes in Southeast Asian cuisine. Most menu items are familiar Thai dishes with a Burmese twist, such as platha (flatbread) with coconut chicken curry dip, Burmese-style pad thai, and various stir-fry entree items.

The operators are currently designing the new restaurant and hope to finalize the plan in the next two months. Once opened, the restaurant will join a mostly vegan restaurant, Green Grill, which is anticipated to open soon. The operators also own similar restaurant concepts in the Bay Area.

What Now Sacramento reached out to the operators for comments, but had not heard back by the time of this coverage.

Xiao daCunha

Xiao daCunha

Xiao Faria daCunha is a practicing visual artist and independent journalist covering what's happening in the Midwest belt. Xiao has written for Chicago Reader, BlockClub Chicago, BRIDGE Chicago, Urban Matter, The Pitch KC, and KCUR. She considers all her practices essential for speaking on behalf of those who haven't been heard, and she sheds light on what hasn't been seen, whether it's emotional, cultural or societal.
Xiao daCunha

Xiao daCunha

Xiao Faria daCunha is a practicing visual artist and independent journalist covering what's happening in the Midwest belt. Xiao has written for Chicago Reader, BlockClub Chicago, BRIDGE Chicago, Urban Matter, The Pitch KC, and KCUR. She considers all her practices essential for speaking on behalf of those who haven't been heard, and she sheds light on what hasn't been seen, whether it's emotional, cultural or societal.
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