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    Bar in Seoul, South Korea

    Casa del Vino

    100pts

    Burgundy-Focused Business Wine

    Casa del Vino, Bar in Seoul

    About Casa del Vino

    Seoul's longest-running wine bar occupies a quiet address in Cheongdam, where Burgundy-focused bottles have been fuelling discreet business dinners for decades. The room attracts a tight circle of Gangnam regulars: executives, collectors, and anyone who prefers conversation over spectacle. Casa del Vino operates less like a bar and more like a private members' ritual performed in plain sight.

    Cheongdam's Quiet Institution

    In Cheongdam, a neighbourhood that has absorbed more concept bars and rooftop lounges than almost anywhere else in Seoul, the bars that endure tend to do so by refusing to compete on novelty. Seoul's cocktail scene has shifted dramatically over the past decade, with technically ambitious programs at venues like Alice Cheongdam and Bar Cham drawing international attention and placing the city on the global bar calendar. Casa del Vino occupies a different position entirely. It is the longest-running wine bar in Seoul, and that tenure is the foundation of everything that makes it worth understanding.

    The address on Seolleung-ro 162-gil sits within Gangnam District, close enough to the money and deal-making of Cheongdam to matter, far enough off the main drag to stay quiet. Arriving, you are not greeted by a queue, a velvet rope, or a mood-lit corridor designed to signal exclusivity. What you find instead is a room that has been doing the same thing, reliably, for longer than most of its neighbours have existed.

    What Longevity Actually Means in This Room

    A wine bar that outlasts Seoul's relentless turnover cycle does not do so by accident. The Korean capital is among the most demanding hospitality markets in Asia: dining and drinking concepts open in waves, peak quickly, and close when the next wave arrives. The bars that persist share a common trait: they serve a community rather than a moment. Casa del Vino built its reputation inside Cheongdam's professional class, where business is routinely conducted over a bottle rather than across a conference table.

    The Burgundy focus is the clearest signal of the clientele it serves. Burgundy, more than any other wine region, functions as a proxy for serious collecting and serious spending in Seoul's upper-tier wine culture. It is the language spoken between people who know what they are talking about, and it has been the house dialect at Casa del Vino long before natural wine bars and Korean-inflected pairings became the dominant editorial story. For context on how the broader Korean bar scene has developed alongside this tradition, venues like Climat in Busan and Regency Club in Incheon illustrate how wine-serious drinking culture has spread beyond Seoul across the peninsula.

    The Role It Plays in the Neighbourhood

    Seoul's bar scene tends to bifurcate: on one side, technically precise cocktail programs at places like Bar D.Still and Charles H that operate on a global reference frame; on the other, neighbourhood anchors whose value is entirely local. Casa del Vino belongs to the second category, but the neighbourhood in question is Cheongdam, which means the regulars are not office workers unwinding over house pours. They are executives, collectors, and people for whom the wine list is part of the reason a deal gets done in the room.

    That functional role as a business venue is not incidental. It is structural. A bottle of good Burgundy creates the kind of shared time and unhurried conversation that a restaurant dinner often cannot — no fixed-course pacing, no pressure to vacate for a second sitting. The wine bar format, when it works at this level, operates as a negotiating room with a better cellar. Casa del Vino has been that room in Cheongdam for longer than any comparable venue in the city.

    The contrast with Seoul's newer, more theatrical wine destinations is instructive. Across the country, wine bars have proliferated at every tier, from natural-wine casual spots to collector-grade cellars. For comparison, Muyongdam in Jeju Si, Anjuga in Ansan Si, and Seuwichi in Heungdeok each represent how wine-bar culture is evolving in different Korean cities and contexts. Casa del Vino predates most of this proliferation and, crucially, has not needed to reinvent itself in response to it.

    Planning Your Visit

    Casa del Vino's address in Gangnam District places it within reasonable reach of Cheongdam's main commercial and hotel corridors, making it a practical stop before or after dinner rather than a destination that requires its own evening. Given the venue's reputation as a business and collector hub, the room is unlikely to feel like a casual drop-in at peak hours on weekday evenings, when Cheongdam's professional circuit is most active. A reservation or at least an early arrival is the sensible approach. Contact details and current opening hours are not confirmed in our records, so checking directly before visiting is advisable. For a broader view of where Casa del Vino fits in the city's overall drinking and dining map, our full Seoul restaurants guide covers the range of options across neighbourhoods and formats.

    For reference on international wine-bar benchmarks that share some of Casa del Vino's DNA in terms of format seriousness and clientele, Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu and Jewel of the South in New Orleans each represent how a focused, credentialed drinks program builds a loyal local constituency over time. The mechanism is the same across markets: depth over novelty, repeat visitors over first-timers.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What's the must-try drink at Casa del Vino?
    Casa del Vino is a wine bar, not a cocktail venue, and its reputation rests specifically on its Burgundy selection. The house strength is the wine list rather than a mixed-drinks program. Visitors coming for a specific bottle or producer recommendation should expect a list shaped around that regional focus rather than a broad-format drinks menu.
    What should I know about Casa del Vino before I go?
    It is the longest-running wine bar in Seoul, operating in Cheongdam within Gangnam District. The clientele skews toward business professionals and serious wine collectors, and the atmosphere reflects that: quiet, purposeful, and Burgundy-oriented. Price range and current hours are not confirmed in our records; verifying details before arrival is recommended.
    Can I walk in to Casa del Vino?
    Walk-ins may be possible, but the venue's profile as a professional and collector hub in Cheongdam suggests that peak weekday evenings run close to capacity. We do not have confirmed booking contact details on record. Arriving early or reaching out through the venue directly before your visit is the practical course of action.
    Is Casa del Vino suitable for a business dinner or client meeting?
    It is arguably the Seoul venue most specifically associated with that function. The bar's identity as a deal-making room in Cheongdam is documented across its entire operating history — the longest of any wine bar in the city. The Burgundy-focused list, the quiet room, and the professional clientele make it a deliberate choice for that kind of meeting rather than a coincidental one.

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