
Club La Feria
Club La Feria occupies a converted warehouse at Constitucion 275 in Bellavista, and it is Santiago's most respected electronic music venue. The space holds roughly 1,500 people across a main dance floor with a Funktion-One sound system that ranks among the best in South America. The ceiling is high, the lighting rig is professional, and the acoustics reflect serious investment. International DJs from Berlin, Amsterdam, and Buenos Aires rotate through regularly, while local residents hold down weeknight slots. The layout is open-plan on the main floor with a raised bar area along one side and a smaller second room for different genres. Bottle service is available in a roped VIP area, but most of the crowd stands or dances near the speakers. The venue has hosted acts like Dixon, Ame, and local heroes like Matanza. Expect long lines on Saturday nights after 1 AM.
What to Expect
A proper warehouse club with serious sound. The bass hits your chest from the moment you walk in. Strobe lights cut through the darkness, and the crowd faces the DJ booth rather than each other. This is a place for people who came for the music.
Dark, bass-heavy, and focused on dancing. Not a place for conversation.
Techno, house, minimal, deep house. The second room leans toward disco and nu-disco on some nights.
Dark casual. Black jeans, sneakers, t-shirts. Nobody overdresses. Avoid sportswear or beach clothes.
Electronic music fans who want a Berlin-quality sound system in South America.
Cards and cash accepted. Some drink tokens sold at the door.
Price Range
Cover 8,000-15,000 CLP, beer 4,000-5,500 CLP, cocktails 7,000-10,000 CLP, bottles from 45,000 CLP
Cover ~-15/~7-14 EUR, beer ~-5.50/~3.50-5 EUR, cocktails ~-10/~6.50-9 EUR
Hours
Fri-Sat from midnight to 6 AM. Occasional Thursday events.
Insider Tip
Arrive before 1 AM to skip the line. Buy tickets online through Passline for discount entry on big nights. The second room plays different genres and is less crowded.
Full Review
La Feria is the club Santiago's electronic music community built for themselves, and it shows. The warehouse conversion at Constitucion 275 keeps the industrial bones: exposed brick, high ceilings, concrete floors. What they've added is world-class: the Funktion-One sound system fills the space without distortion at any volume, and the lighting rig runs on professional-grade Martin fixtures.
The main room is where the headliners play. On a Saturday night with a good booking, 1,200 people pack the floor, and the energy is genuine. The crowd knows the DJs, knows the tracks, and responds to transitions. This isn't background music for socializing. People face the booth and dance.
The second room offers a change of pace. Smaller, lower ceiling, different sound. On house nights it plays warmer, funkier music with a crowd that's there to groove rather than pound. The bar service in both rooms is decent, with beer being the fastest option and cocktails taking longer during peak hours.
The VIP area is fine if you want table service, but it's not necessary and doesn't get you any social advantage. The crowd respects the music over the money. Compared to Santiago's other options, nothing else comes close for electronic music. The city's smaller clubs and after-hours spots feed off the energy La Feria creates.
The Neighborhood
La Feria sits on Constitucion, one block west of Bellavista's main bar strip on Pio Nono. The surrounding blocks have restaurants and smaller bars that serve as pre-club warm-up spots. After La Feria closes at 6 AM, the nearby empanada shops and completo stands fill with the post-club crowd.
Getting There
Metro Baquedano (Lines 1 and 5), then a 10-minute walk north across the Pio Nono bridge into Bellavista. Turn left on Constitucion. Uber from Providencia costs about 3,000-5,000 CLP.
Address
Constitucion 275, Bellavista, Santiago
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El Tunel
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La Casa en el Aire
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