The Medina rooftop experience has a specific sequence. You reach the restaurant by climbing a staircase inside a building that gives no indication from the street of what’s above — the entrance is often a plain door, the staircase narrow, the first sight of the terrace a genuine reveal. From the top, the view over the Medina is the compressed geometry of a thousand rooftops at different heights, satellite dishes alongside zellige water channels, the minarets of the Koutoubia and the Ben Youssef mosque visible above the skyline. In the late afternoon, the call to prayer carries across this view from multiple mosques simultaneously. After dark, the lights of the Jemaa el-Fna are visible from the higher terraces.
The practical value of rooftop dining is that it gets you out of the Medina’s sensory intensity while staying physically inside it. The best use of a rooftop is an hour before sunset — the light on the city is at its best between 5 and 6pm (later in summer), the tables are not yet fully booked, and the temperature is comfortable. Staying through the transition to evening gives a complete picture of how the city changes between afternoon and night.












