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October 01, 2025

Cantina la Martina in Kensington will close next month, but owners are searching for a new location

The Mexican restaurant has been open for four years and is led by chef Dionicio Jimenez, a James Beard Award finalist

Business Restaurants
Cantina la martina closing Provided Image/Cantina La Martina

Cantina La Martina will close Nov. 2 after the owners decided not to renew their lease on D Street in Kensington. Above, tamales from the Mexican restaurant.

Kensington Mexican restaurant Cantina La Martina, created by chef Dionicio Jimenez, a James Beard Award finalist, will close Nov. 2 after nearly four years on D Street, the owners and general manager announced on Instagram on Monday. 

The team said they will not be renewing their lease "due to circumstances beyond our control." 


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However, Jimenez and his wife and co-owner Mariangeli Alicea Saez said it won't be the end for the restaurant, as they're actively searching for a new space. They'll also be hosting a celebration of life for the eatery on its last day. 

"This is a transition Cantina's going through, but we're not closing, we're not going anywhere," Jimenez said. "We're still going to work with our organization in Kensington, we're going to support anything that's going on in Kensington." 

In the interim, some of the restaurant's food can be found at Human Robot Brewery in Jenkintown, and Jimenez still runs La Baja in Ambler. Cantina will also be available at pop-ups and for catering private events.  

The restaurant opened in 2022 at 2800 D St. as the first solo venture of Jimenez, who previously worked at El Rey and Vetri Cucina. He was a finalist for best chef Mid-Atlantic in the 2023 James Beard Awards and a semifinalist for outstanding chef the following year. 

Jimenez and Alicea Saez originally opened the restaurant to benefit the Kensington neighborhood. However, in 2024 they told the Inquirer that they struggled with the conditions outside their restaurant after an encampment clearing at Kensington and Allegheny avenues pushed open-air drug use closer to their home near the Somerset stop on the Market-Frankford line. 

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