The house party bar concept opened at 91-93 Great Eastern Street on 6 July, with 50% off bills for the first two weeks.
If you’ve been to any of Little Door & Co.’s other London venues, you already know the format: a bar built to look and feel like someone’s flat, with a kitchen disco, karaoke in the bathroom, cocktails served in household objects and an atmosphere pitched somewhere between a house party and a very well-stocked living room. The concept has worked in Notting Hill, Fulham, Clapham, Soho and Carnaby. Shoreditch, which has been crying out for somewhere exactly like this since about 2019, is next.
The venue

The Little Neon Door takes over a two-floor space on Great Eastern Street and is the brand’s largest site yet. Spread across five rooms, it works through the logic of an actual flatshare: a sitting room for arrivals, a living room and kitchen where DJs play from the kitchen island from Wednesday to Saturday, a laundry room and bathroom complete with karaoke machine and selfie-ready bathtub, a mezzanine games room with a giant-screen Nintendo 64, table football and a ping pong table that doubles as a DJ station later in the evening, and a dressing room with leopard print sofas and a fancy dress cupboard for anyone who wants to commit to the theme.
The aesthetic is Shoreditch loft: raw finishes, industrial bones, neon accents. Colourful and laid-back during the day, loud and electric after dark. It’s designed for groups rather than solo visits, which is exactly right for what it is.
The Supermundane door
The detail that elevates this above a standard venue opening: for the first time, Little Door & Co. has handed its front door over to an artist. They chose Supermundane, the pseudonym of graphic artist and designer Rob Lowe, which is either an inspired piece of local casting or a very good coincidence. Lowe has been woven into Shoreditch’s creative fabric for over thirty years: making flyers for legendary club 333, art directing SleazeNation and Anorak, painting the rooftop wall at Jealous Gallery on Curtain Road, and filling the Broadgate amphitheatre with colour.
His work is in the permanent collection at Leeds station, Great Ormond Street and Covent Garden. He found the name Supermundane, meaning “beyond earthly things,” in a dictionary while working at a kettle factory in the Midlands. The door is his East London chapter number thirty-something.
The launch offer
Early bookers get 50% off their entire bill from 6 to 19 July for groups of up to nine people, which is a significant opening offer and worth taking seriously if you’ve been looking for a reason to get a group together.
The London x London Take: The house party bar format is well-established enough now that the execution has to be genuinely good to stand out, and Little Door & Co. has a strong track record on that front. The Shoreditch location is right, the venue is large enough to absorb a group without feeling cramped, and the Supermundane door is the kind of thoughtful detail that signals someone was paying attention. Worth booking in the first fortnight while the discount holds.
Need to Know
- Where: The Little Neon Door, 91-93 Great Eastern Street, London EC2A 3HZ
- Opens: Monday 6 July 2026
- Hours: Mon to Wed 3pm to 1am; Thu 3pm to 2am; Fri 3pm to 3am; Sat 12pm to 3am; Sun 12pm to 11pm
- Launch offer: 50% off bills for groups up to nine, 6 to 19 July





