The ‘wrong orders’ restaurant, where the waiters are people with dementia


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Image from the restaurant’s website

Would you be satisfied with a lunch or dinner at a restaurant where you ordered one thing and received another, where the elderly waitress sat down with you at the table after showing you to your seat, or where an equally elderly waiter drank your glass of water that came with your coffee? 99% of customers who frequents the place we are talking about today is, because the Restaurant of Mistaken Orders in Tokyo it is not a restaurant like all the others. The restaurant of the “wrong orders”, in fact, has a staff entirely composed of employees generally elderly suffering from dementia problems of various nature.

The project was born to raise awareness of the problems related to dementia, a problem that affects approximately 40 million people all over the world and especially in Japan, where people live particularly long. Dementia is a great social, health and economic challenge, which is why the restaurant project was born: a story that seems like a fairy tale to raise awareness about a topic that is still not discussed enough.

How the restaurant works

The idea for the Wrong Orders restaurant came to TV director Shiro Oguni and it is very simple: a restaurant where only people work, mostly elderly, affected by dementia, of which Alzheimer’s is one of the most known causes, although certainly not the only one nor the most frequent. A way to raise awareness on the issue, to make light of a reality that is often difficult even for the relatives of the sick people and a way to give these people a social value.

The place is not always open – it can be considered as a sort of itinerant event organized on specific days – but when it is there it is a place that has a unique atmosphere, impossible to find in any other restaurant defined as “normal”. Here the distribution of the dishes is completely random and orders can come right or wrongand the waiters are out of the ordinary: they sit at the table with the customers, serve the meals in an original way, chat between affectionate smiles and tears, often those of emotion from the customers.

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Image from the restaurant’s website

The Wrong Orders Restaurant is an unusual but incredibly effective way to present the challenges of dementia to patients and their families. And the customers, much to the surprise of the creator of the project, are not annoyed, but rather sit down curiously and get up satisfied. The credit for the success? The great organizational machine composed of professionals, not only of good cuisine but also of the health sector and associations that deal with dementia conditions.

But above all the credit for the success goes to these people, adults but turned into children again due to an illness, who in their disarming innocence know how to give their customers not only an excellent meal, but a human warmth that remains imprinted much more than the food eaten.

Restaurant of Mistaken Orders, a project in expansion

The Wrong Orders Restaurant is born in 2017 from an idea by television director Shiro Oguni. During a visit to a family home with elderly people suffering from dementia, he happened to receive a different dish than the one requested, but to experience the event with serenity precisely because of the atmosphere created by the sick people.

From there the spark: why not make this cute mistake a real restaurantcapable of raising public awareness of the widespread neurological condition, making society more open, inclusive and tolerant towards people with cognitive impairment?

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Image from the restaurant’s website

The opening of the restaurant required a large initial investment, around 115,000 dollars, which were put together through a fundraiser, but it was a huge success: not only in Japan the initiative has been held regularly since 2017, but It has already been replicated in South Korea and Australia.

A great satisfaction for Shiro Oguni, who at first was worried that the initiative could be understood as a spectacularization of dementia, or that the people involved could be ridiculed. In reality it is quite the opposite: waiters and waitresses feel usefulstill with value despite the illness and their pure joy is so disarming that leave guests with deep emotion.

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Image from the restaurant’s website



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