In the shadow of the Qutub Minar, hidden behind the hush of velvet curtains and a no-photos policy, Mama Killa makes its celestial debut.
This isn’t a bar. This isn’t even a restaurant. This is a rite of passage.
The latest creation by Zorawar Kalra – restaurateur, innovator, icon – Mama Killa is a tribute to Delhi: a city of secrets, stories and silent seduction. An elite yet inclusive sanctuary, rooted in ancient energy, but designed for those who move with modern intention.
India’s first Aztec bar, Mama Killa, channels the mysticism of the moon goddess it’s named after. Spread across a 1300sq ft rooftop in Mehrauli, the space is designed as a modern-day fort, a sanctum built with local love and global soul. Think mosaic murals that tell stories without words, terracotta walls that breathe, cane pendant lights that cast shadows like secrets and graffiti hidden just out of frame.
Zorawar Kalra says it best: “Delhi deserves a space that feels both ancient and futuristic, grounded yet elevated. Mama Killa is a love letter to the city’s cultural richness and cosmopolitan spirit – wrapped in mystery, lit by moonlight and meant for the unapologetically alive.”