The Living Room brand has operated in San Diego since Thanksgiving 1991, when founder Sam Azzu launched the original location in the College Area. The La Jolla outpost arrived in 1993 and spent three decades as a Prospect Street anchor before closing and reopening in a vastly larger format — roughly 10,000 square feet, quadrupling the prior footprint.
Sources: sandiegoville.com · mapquest.com · order.toasttab.com · whatnow.com · airial.travel · corner.inc
“Straddling daytime cafe and evening destination — either flexibility or identity diffusion, depending on the visit.”
The expanded space pushes the concept well past a standard coffee counter. A full kitchen now turns out wood-fired pizzas, pastas, appetizers, and house-made gelato, positioning the operation closer to a European-style brasserie that happens to pull espresso. The menu straddles daytime cafe and evening destination without committing fully to either, which is either flexibility or identity diffusion depending on the visit.
Sources: sandiegoville.com · whatnow.com · mindtrip.ai · joe.coffee
Nightlife is the newest bet. A speakeasy-inspired lounge area leans whiskey-heavy and hosts live jazz and open-mic nights — a deliberate play for after-dark foot traffic on a strip that historically quiets down early. Indoor and outdoor seating fills out an eclectic, warm interior designed for long stays.
Sources: sandiegoville.com · whatnow.com · wanderlog.com · airial.travel · corner.inc · mindtrip.ai
Azzu has described the original concept as a cultural gathering point that drew an international crowd nightly. The La Jolla relaunch is testing whether that community-hub identity scales with a much bigger room and a much broader menu.
Sources: sandiegoville.com · mapquest.com · order.toasttab.com · whatnow.com · wanderlog.com
Based on ~5 Yelp pages, ~3 TripAdvisor pages, ~1 BBB entries, ~1 Reddit threads, and editorial sources.