
Sótano Club – Palma's Electronic Heart Beneath the Plaça Gomila
The stairs lead down. Through an unassuming door at Plaça Gomila 2, into a basement that Palma's music scene has claimed as its own since opening night in late summer. Those who take the steps descend into one of the island's most distinctive music offerings: industrial, intimate, uncompromising in its attitude – and understated in how it carries that attitude outward. Sótano Club, named simply for what it is (sótano: basement), doesn't position itself as an event venue. It positions itself as a refuge for those who know what they're looking for.
El Terreno and the Gomila Revival
Arriving at Plaça Gomila means entering one of Palma's most dynamic neighbourhoods in transition. El Terreno, the hillside district above the Paseo Marítimo and at the foot of the Bellver woodland, was Palma's pulsing nightlife centre from the 1950s through the 1970s. International society, artists, travellers – the Gomila and its clubs drew everyone. The legend that music greats like Jimi Hendrix, Ray Charles and Tom Jones performed in the basement bars and dance halls of the neighbourhood is part of the collective memory here; the legendary Tito's still stands in immediate proximity.
Then came the tower blocks along the Paseo Marítimo, the decline of the old clubs and decades of urban stagnation. The Gomila turned into a ghost strip. Today it is the opposite: the urban regeneration project Project Gomila – an intensely colourful revitalisation plan by architecture firms MVRDV and GRAS Reynés Arquitectos, financed by the Fluxà family (owners of the Camper brand) – is creating around sixty apartments plus retail. New dining and nightlife addresses are following. Among them: Sótano Club, accompanying the revival of Gomila party culture with a clear programme. Let's make Gomila dance again – that is both self-understanding and promise.
An Address With Memory
The basement rooms where Sótano Club now operates carry long memories. This address opened as Plató, became Cats Club, was then taken over by Toni Fuentes and Ivor Martínez and reshaped in the mid-2000s into the electronic club La Metro. Some years later Tunnel Rock Club moved in – for over three decades Palma's best-known rock and heavy metal address, before it closed after prolonged uncertainty about the future of the Gomila neighbourhood. Sótano Club is not the first identity these rooms have worn – but perhaps the clearest.
Behind the project stand owner Miquel Àngel Fernández and the DJ couple Paula Serra and Víctor Lorenzo de Juan, who plays under the artist name Vikenzo. They simultaneously operate Es Molí Club on Calle Indústria – a venue that grew too small for them over the years. With Sótano Club they sought a more ambitious container for their ideas.
Sound and Concept
Sótano Club begins with electronic music – because, as the founders say, that is what they know. Minimal, progressive, tech house and house are the genres that define the programme. The distinction between Friday and Saturday is deliberate: more commercial on Fridays, more underground on Saturdays. A programming logic that leaves room for different tastes without diluting the identity of the house.
Regular visitors learn the recurring formats: POSIDONIA invites into progressive underground sound immersions, LOCAL RESONANCE places local DJs with minimal and house at the centre, while FUNKTION, FACTORY, REC and ELEVATE round out the weekly programme. Paula Serra and Vikenzo play in their own club themselves – alongside booked guests from the island and abroad.
The programme is explicitly conceived as a living project: electronics is the starting point, not the limit. Live music and other genres are intended to follow once the foundation is set.
Sotano Live – Concerts in the Basement
Parallel to the club programme, the venue has built its own live music arm under the name Sotano Live. Saturday early evenings host tardeo concerts featuring bands and artists. The venue's kitchen prepares snacks – those who want to stay after a concert can flow seamlessly into the DJ night.
The Room: Industrial, Intimate, Sonically Charged
Industrial character, subdued lighting, walls that hold the basslines like a resonating body – the basement at Plaça Gomila is not a large house. That is intentional. Sótano Club explicitly positions itself as a counterpoint to the mass-tourist clubs of the island: smaller, more concentrated, with a stronger musical profile. The sound system is configured for maximum audio quality; a dual DJ booth allows flexible stage configurations and handovers. The crowd knows the music they came for – and a minimum age of 20 sets a subtle but clear social frame.
For those who only knew Gomila from old photographs, or who walked through the neighbourhood and wondered what was still to come – Sótano Club is a compelling first answer.




