Cafe Sevilla exits Downtown Long Beach; Ole takeover to open Mar. 29

Cafe Sevilla has formally vacated its Downtown Long Beach space on Pine Avenue, handing the lease over to Jerry Najera, who will rename it Ole. He is the new owner of the long-running Continental Room in Fullerton after Sean Francis handed over the reins. The space is reopening on Mar. 29.

Ole will be an updated, more modernized version of Sevilla

Najera spoke highly of not just Downtown—”I understand Eric had a problem with the homelessness but, in all honesty, I feel like Downtown keeps getting better and better,” he said—but also of Cafe Sevilla itself. Its staff. Its ambiance. And its vibe.

“We’ve kept the entire staff of Sevilla because they were so good that there was really no need to let anyone go,” Najera said. “We’re keeping the club, we’re keeping the flamenco entertainment… It’s really about sprucing up and modernizing the space more than anything.”

The club, soon to be dubbed “Club O,” will be the heart of the business. Najera loves the restaurant but admits that “without the club, the restaurant wouldn’t survive. If we break even on the restaurant, I am good.”

Come Mar. 29, Ole will open its doors for the first time, revamped and ready for a new era of Spanish-inspired entertainment.

The history of Cafe Sevilla

The concept of Sevilla began in 1987, when Spanish-born founders Rogelio and Janet Huidobro opened the first Sevilla with the goal of recreating the atmosphere of the tapas bars and nightlife they knew from Spain…

Story continues

TRENDING NOW

LATEST LOCAL NEWS