Mesa - Serene Ghost Kitchen Landing Page Template
Mesa is a single-page ghost kitchen landing page template built for delivery-only food brands and commissary kitchen operators. It uses an asymmetric 60/40 grid, a warm Sunset Mesa color palette, and a case study narrative scroll flow to build trust and drive visitors toward booking a kitchen tour. No forms, no friction, just a well-timed click to availability.
by Rocket studio
Quick summary
Mesa is a click-through landing page template designed for ghost kitchen and cloud kitchen spaces. It pairs a cinematic wide-header with a case study scroll structure, a transparent pricing snapshot, and an interactive location map. The goal is straightforward: earn visitor trust through operator stories and move them to a kitchen availability and tour-booking page.
Who this template is for
This template is built for operators and marketers running commissary kitchen spaces that serve delivery-only food brands. If you rent commercial kitchen bays to independent cooks, franchise operators, or food entrepreneurs, Mesa gives you a ready-made page that speaks directly to how your clients think and what they need to hear before they commit.
- Ghost kitchen and cloud kitchen facility operators who want a professional presence without building from scratch
- Food entrepreneurs and delivery-brand founders looking for a template to model their own pitch page after
- Commissary kitchen marketers needing a high-trust, story-led landing page to replace a generic contact form
What problem this template solves
Most commercial kitchen rental pages look like classified listings. They list square footage, post a phone number, and ask visitors to call. That approach loses the people who are most ready to act. Mesa replaces that generic pattern with something that feels considered and human.
- Visitors leave rental pages early because there is nothing to hold their attention or build confidence
- Pricing is often buried or vague, which creates hesitation before a visitor ever reaches a booking step
- The absence of real operator stories means prospects cannot picture themselves succeeding in the space
What you get with this template
Mesa delivers a fully structured, single-page layout ready to populate with your own kitchen photography, operator stories, and pricing details. Every section has a clear job to do, and the visual flow guides visitors from curiosity to commitment without a single form field.
- Asymmetric 60/40 grid sections that pair operator narratives with supporting photography or key metrics
- A transparent pricing snapshot block covering monthly base rate, no revenue share, and no long-term lock-in
- A sticky mobile bottom bar with a secondary call-to-action linking to a Calendly-style scheduling embed
Feature list
Mesa's built-in components are purpose-selected for ghost kitchen and commissary rental conversion. Each feature is grounded in the template brief and serves a specific role in the page flow.
Panoramic Cinematic Header
The header spans the full viewport width with a magic-hour ghost kitchen corridor image. The headline drifts in from the left, setting the tone immediately: direct, confident, and unhurried. This opening frame establishes the space's character before a visitor reads a single line of body copy.
Asymmetric 60/40 Case Study Grid
Each scroll section uses a split layout where the wider column carries a short operator story and the narrower column holds a single image or a large key metric. The narrative arc moves from a solo founder at forty weekly orders to a three-brand operator at six hundred, showing real growth without overpromising.
Repeating Terracotta call to action Blocks
The primary call-to-action, "See Available Kitchens," appears below the header and repeats after every second case study. Each instance uses terracotta text on a cream background, making the action visually consistent and easy to find at any scroll depth.
Transparent Pricing Snapshot
A dedicated pricing section shows monthly base cost, confirms there is no revenue share, and states there is no long-term lease lock-in. This removes the most common objection a prospective kitchen renter carries into the page.
Interactive Location Map
A compact map component displays current kitchen locations and flags bays with open availability. Visitors can scan locations at a glance without leaving the page or contacting anyone first.
Sticky Mobile Bottom Bar
On smaller screens, a persistent bottom bar stays visible as visitors scroll. It reads "Talk to our kitchen team" and links to a scheduling embed, giving mobile visitors a low-friction secondary path that does not interrupt the main narrative.
Page sections overview
| Section | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Panoramic header | Establish visual tone and headline |
| Primary call to action block | First invitation to view availability |
| Case study one | Solo founder origin story |
| Operator metric panel | Key growth number, large format |
| Case study two | Second operator concept story |
| Repeating call to action block | Mid-page availability prompt |
| Case study three | Multi-brand operator story |
| Pricing snapshot | Monthly rate, no lock-in summary |
| Location map | Current kitchens, open bays |
| Final call to action block | Last availability invitation |
| Mobile sticky bar | Mobile scheduling shortcut |
Design & branding system
Mesa uses the Sunset Mesa color system, a palette drawn from the visual feeling of a high desert plateau at the last hour of daylight. Every color choice is intentional and mapped to a specific content role across the page.
- Warm sandstone (#D4A373) carries headlines and section dividers; dusted terracotta (#BC6C25) marks calls-to-action and hover states
- Deep sage (#606C38) grounds body text and secondary elements, keeping long reading sections easy on the eye
- Fading sky cream (#FEFAE0) stretches behind every section as the dominant background, giving the page a spacious, open feeling
Mobile & speed optimization
The template is built with mobile visitors in mind. The sticky bottom bar and simplified grid stacking ensure that the click-through path remains clear on any screen size.
- The 60/40 asymmetric grid collapses into a single-column stacked layout on mobile, keeping operator stories and images readable without horizontal scrolling
- The sticky bottom bar activates only on smaller screens, providing a persistent "Talk to our kitchen team" path without cluttering the desktop layout
- All section transitions and header elements are designed to load visually clean, with no heavy interaction layers that would delay the first meaningful view
How this template helps you convert
Mesa is structured as a click-through landing page, meaning every design decision leads toward one primary outcome: a visitor clicking through to the kitchen availability and tour-booking page. The page earns that click gradually, not instantly.
- The cinematic header and opening headline create an immediate sense of place and credibility, so visitors feel they have arrived somewhere considered rather than somewhere generic
- The case study narrative arc accumulates trust with each scroll section, replacing the need for testimonial carousels or review widgets with something more compelling: a progression of real operator outcomes
- The transparent pricing snapshot and interactive map remove the two biggest pre-click hesitations, making the "See Available Kitchens" call-to-action feel like a natural next step rather than a leap of faith
Other information about this template
Mesa fits naturally within the broader Real Estate and Property category, specifically the space and rental platforms subcategory. It is designed for operators who want a landing page that feels like a brand rather than a bulletin board.
- The Pastoral Calm visual theme gives Mesa a tone that stands apart from typical commercial real estate pages, which often lean cold and transactional
- The page structure supports delivery-only food brand contexts including commissary kitchen rentals, shared commercial kitchen spaces, and multi-bay cloud kitchen facilities
- Because no form lives on the page, the entire trust-building burden falls on design, copy, and narrative, which is exactly what this template is built to carry
- The template is suited to markets where kitchen operators compete on culture and flexibility, not just square footage and monthly rate




Theme
Atelier Studio
Creative direction
Gallery Walk
Color system
Midnight Blue
Style
Zigzag/Alternating
Direction
Quiz/Assessment
Page Sections
Panoramic Cinematic Header
Asymmetric 60/40 Case Study Grid
Repeating Terracotta Call to Action Blocks
Transparent Pricing Snapshot
Interactive Location Map
Sticky Mobile Bottom Bar
Related questions
Does this template include any contact forms?
Can I use this template for a single kitchen location?
How do I update the operator case study content?
Is the pricing snapshot section editable?
What image format works best in the cinematic header?