Buckfast-loving Brits will soon be able to inhale their favourite drink through their eyes and lungs.

Alcoholic Architecture – in which bartenders create a walk-in cloud of breathable cocktail created by vaporising alcohol into the atmosphere of the bar – could soon enjoy inhaling Buckfast. Visitors to Pop-up barinwhich bartenders create a walk-in cloud of breathable cocktail created by vaporising alcohol into the atmosphere of the bar – could soon enjoy inhaling Buckfast.

Visitors to the bar drink their airborne cocktails by absorbing alcohol in the super-saturated air through their eyes and lungs.

The swanky London-based venue, which asks patrons to breathe responsibly, is currently featuring a crowd-pleasing cloud of gin and tonic.

However, managers say that notorious Buckfast is on the shortlist of drinks set to be vaporised by their experimenting bartenders.

Alcoholic Architecture opened in London’s pricey Borough Market at the end of July, touting itself as the worlds first alcoholic weather system for your tongue where meteorology and mixology collide.

Those running the trendy new bar describe it as an installation that “explodes drinks to the scale of architecture” to create a space that that “spatialises the world’s best cocktails and creates a fully immersive alcohol environment”.

Patrons are charged £12.50 for an hour in the rarefied atmosphere of the bar – where they will breathe in the equivalent of one spirit and mixer drink.

They are asked to don plastic suits to protect their clothes from the boozy air created by powerful humidifiers – which reduces visibility to less than a metre, and after an hour inside they are cut off – as the alcohol inhaled bypasses the liver, dramatically enhancing its effect.