
Living Night Club
Living Night Club is a modern multi-room discoteca at Carrera 40 #11-81 on the Yumbo side of Menga, with electronic, crossover, and reggaeton zones. The space runs across multiple rooms with bottle service, VIP tables, and a 22-35 affluent crowd. The production values are notably higher than the classic Menga salsotecas: serious sound systems in each room, full LED lighting rigs, fog machines, lasers, and bottle-service infrastructure. The music programming skews electronic and reggaeton rather than classic salsa, making it the most polished and least salsa-purist venue in the Menga cluster. Cover charges run 25,000-45,000 COP with bottle service tables starting at 250,000 COP minimum spend.
Where to stay near Living Night Club
Hotels and rentals within walking distance.
What to Expect
A modern multi-room discoteca with polished production, electronic and reggaeton programming, and bottle service infrastructure. The most affluent and least salsa-purist Menga venue.
Polished, production-driven, bottle-service-focused. The most modern and least classic-salsa Menga venue.
Electronic, deep house, reggaeton, Latin crossover, occasional progressive house
Smart-casual to clubwear strictly enforced. Long trousers, closed-toe shoes, collared shirts. No shorts, sandals, or athletic wear.
Affluent dance evenings, bottle service groups, electronic and reggaeton fans, polished club experiences.
Cards strongly preferred, cash accepted
Price Range
Cover 25,000-45,000 COP, beer 10,000-15,000 COP, cocktails 18,000-28,000 COP, bottle service 250,000-450,000 COP minimum
Cover ~$6-10.70/€5.50-9.60, beer ~$2.40-3.60/€2.20-3.30, bottle service ~$60-107/€55-96
Hours
Wed-Sat 23:00 to 05:00
Insider Tip
Reserve bottle service tables ahead through Instagram for groups of six or more; minimum spends apply but pricing is reasonable. Dress code is strictly enforced at the door. The electronic and reggaeton zones run separate programming; check schedules.
Full Review
Living Night Club sits at Carrera 40 #11-81 on the Yumbo side of Menga, occupying a multi-room building with the most polished production values in the cluster. The interior runs modern: polished concrete floors, full LED lighting rigs in each room, serious sound systems tuned for electronic and dance music, fog machines, lasers, and bottle-service tables with raised platforms for visibility. The room layouts include a main electronic room, a reggaeton room, and a VIP-tables area.
The music programming skews electronic and reggaeton rather than classic salsa. Resident DJs and visiting Bogotá talent run deep house, progressive, reggaeton, and Latin crossover programming. International DJs appear during major festivals (Salsa Festival weekends, Feria de Cali). The sound systems in each room are tuned for the bass-driven dance music rather than the percussion-and-horn complexity of classic salsa.
Compared to the classic Menga salsotecas (Zaperoco, Bailatino), Living Night Club is significantly more polished and pulls an entirely different crowd: 22-35, affluent, bottle-service-focused. The salsa-purist crowd at Zaperoco would find Living Night Club's electronic focus unappealing; conversely, the electronic-music crowd at Living wouldn't enjoy Zaperoco's classic-salsa programming. Compared to Praga Menga, Living is less multi-format and more committed to its electronic identity.
The bottle service infrastructure is the venue's distinguishing feature. Tables for groups of six to eight run 250,000-450,000 COP minimum spend with multiple bottle options (aguardiente, rum, premium spirits). The dress code is strictly enforced at the door; bouncers turn away patrons in shorts, sandals, or athletic wear. Reservations help on Friday and Saturday for both bottle tables and door entry during peak hours.
The Neighborhood
Living Night Club sits at Carrera 40 #11-81 on the Yumbo side of Menga. Other Menga discotecas are within five minutes by ride share; the cluster is not pedestrian-friendly.
Getting There
Uber from Granada 12,000-20,000 COP and 10-15 minutes. From El Peñón 18,000-28,000 COP and 15-20 minutes. From the airport 50,000-70,000 COP and 20-30 minutes. Pre-arrange return ride share.
Address
Carrera 40 #11-81, Menga, Yumbo, Colombia
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Browse Colombia eSIM plansOther Venues in Menga

Zaperoco Bar
Legendary salsoteca on Avenida 5 Norte specializing in hard salsa and classic salsa with vinyl-driven sets and live orchestras on Thursday nights. The dance floor and listening sessions draw serious salsa fans rather than tourists looking to party.

Praga Menga
Multi-level discoteca on the Menga strip with crossover music, large dance floors, and late-license programming running past 4 AM. Crowd skews 25-35 with a strong local presence and growing international following.

Bailatino Menga
Classic Menga salsoteca and discoteca running salsa, merengue, and crossover. Large outdoor terrace, late closing, and a reputation as a serious-dancers venue rather than a tourist stop. Cover includes a welcome drink on most nights.

Space Disco Menga
Large crossover discoteca with electronic and reggaeton programming. Multiple bars, LED-heavy production, and capacity in the hundreds. Open Thursday through Saturday and busiest after midnight.

Siboney Club-Discoteca
Founded in 1981, Siboney is one of the last surviving salsa institutions from the genre's 1970s-80s boom. The club recently moved its location but retains the same partner-dance focus and Tuesday-night salsa programming.

La Negra Disco Club
Crossover discoteca on the Menga strip with salsa, merengue, and Latin pop. Smaller capacity than the mega-clubs nearby, with a more local crowd and a reputation for serious dancing rather than VIP-table culture.