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OGYU Japanese BBQ & Bar brings grill-it-yourself Wagyu to the former Iron Hill Brewery in Ardmore

OGYU is the newest restaurant from Sam Li, owner of Newtown Square's Hiramasa and Osushi, which has locations in Ardmore, Marlton, and Wayne.

Server Gina Lee prepares Japanese Wagyu barbecue tableside at OGYU Japanese BBQ on Tuesday, July 7, 2026, in Ardmore. The newly opened restaurant offers a modern Japanese steakhouse experience with tabletop grilling, adding to Ardmore's growing dining scene.
Server Gina Lee prepares Japanese Wagyu barbecue tableside at OGYU Japanese BBQ on Tuesday, July 7, 2026, in Ardmore. The newly opened restaurant offers a modern Japanese steakhouse experience with tabletop grilling, adding to Ardmore's growing dining scene.Read moreJose F. Moreno / Staff Photographer

In building the concept for his newest restaurant, Sam Li flew halfway across the world for a culinary research journey. He traveled across China, Japan, and Korea to study, and sample, the three countries’ ways of doing barbecue. It was at a Japanese yakiniku — or grilled meat — restaurant that he knew he had found his next project.

Li is the owner of OGYU Japanese BBQ & Bar, an upscale, grill-it-yourself Japanese barbecue restaurant that opened in Ardmore last month. The restaurant offers a tiered, fixed-price menu with a focus on “higher quality premium Wagyu beef.” OGYU is located in the former Iron Hill Brewery at 60 Greenfield Ave., which closed in 2024 before Iron Hill filed for bankruptcy last year.

Though OGYU has found a home in what was once Iron Hill, Li and his team have transformed the former brewery’s space into a sleek, club-like atmosphere, with black and gold detailing, marble-paneled walls, and an opulent, fully stocked bar.

Li grew up in a restaurant family. His grandparents opened Oriental Palace in Lawnside in 1978, and he took over the restaurant from his parents in 2003.

He now sits at the helm of seven restaurants in the Philly suburbs, including sushi restaurant Osushi, with locations in Marlton, Ardmore, and Wayne; upscale Japanese restaurant Hiramasa in Newtown Square; and fast-casual chain bb.q Chicken, with two locations in South Jersey.

While Li has built his brand largely around sushi, he said he saw an opportunity in the market when it came to Japanese barbecue. There aren’t many yakiniku restaurants in the region, he said, and it’s a relatively new concept to many of his diners. People tend to be familiar with Korean barbecue, which leans more into marinades and flavors than its Japanese counterpart, which more often lets the meat speak for itself, Li said.

“We felt that it could be a new concept that we could bring into the U.S, and it’s something new to Ardmore,” Li said.

Bringing a new concept to customers has meant lots of education, both for OGYU’s staff and its customers, who need to learn how to operate the tabletop grills and cook pieces of Wagyu to perfection. OGYU is an interactive experience, in addition to a meal, with flashy dry ice presentations and the challenge — and excitement — of grilling your own dinner in the middle of the table.

OGYU offers an all-you-can-eat, fixed-price menu with four tiers: Silver ($39), Gold ($59), Platinum ($79), and Diamond ($99).

The main difference in the tiers is the quality of the meat, Li said. The introductory tier is best for diners who “just want to experience and explore what yakiniku is about.” The Diamond tier will be “the ultimate experience.”

Beyond what goes on the grill, OGYU offers a menu of à la carte dishes, including spicy kani salad ($9.95), wagyu truffle fried rice ($21.95), wasabi lobster tempura ($19.95), butter cheese corn ($9.95), and various hand rolls and sashimi. Li describes the à la carte menu as inspired by Japanese street food.

OGYU is open from 11:30 a.m. to 10 p.m., Sunday through Thursday, and 11:30 a.m. to 11 p.m., Friday and Saturday.

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