Om's living room
15, 2 Soi Si Lom 11, Si Lom, Bang Rak, Bangkok 10500
Silom has enough bar density that a living room concept needs to actually deliver on the intimacy it promises to hold a regular following. The review count at 218 suggests Om's Living Room has done exactly that. The personal naming of the concept gives the bar a human dimension that distinguishes it from corporate venue concepts. A reliable choice for an evening drink in the Silom zone when a relaxed format is the priority.
Om's Living Room is a bar in the Si Lom area of Bang Rak. The name suggests an intimate, casual format modelled on a domestic living room environment. Bars with living room concepts position themselves as an antidote to the more high-energy venues that dominate the central Bangkok bar scene. The Si Lom sub-district covers the Silom commercial corridor and its surrounding residential zones. With 218 reviews, the bar has built a following among guests who prefer a relaxed format over louder venue types. Bang Rak sits between the Silom corridor and the Chao Phraya riverfront. This gives the venue access from both the BTS Silom line and the river ferry network. A living room format typically emphasises comfortable seating and a lower-energy drinks program over late-night volume. The ownership name Om embedded in the concept title gives the bar a personal character that anonymous venue names lack.
The bar draws from the Silom professional crowd alongside the growing residential population of the Bang Rak area. The Silom corridor attracts evening drinkers who want an alternative to the higher-volume options along the main road. A living room concept bar tends to see heavy repeat visits from a core group of regulars who adopt the venue as their neighbourhood base. The review count at 218 reflects that pattern of regular usage. Weekend evenings bring guests from across the central zone. Weeknights are more neighbourhood-focused with a higher proportion of regulars. The format creates a bar that feels like a permanent fixture in the neighbourhood rather than a rotating concept.