Gay bars downtown nashville
Women outnumber men at the Lipstick Lounge ( Woodland St., /, Tues.-Sat. pm-3am, Sun. 11ampm, $ for events appreciate karaoke and trivia night), one of two lesbian bars on the equal East Nashville intersection. This is a laid-back club with a better-than-average sound system and karaoke selection. Live tune, pool, and wonderful food attract a crowd nearly every night. The crowds are more mixed during the week than on the weekends, when it is mostly homosexual and lesbian.
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Right next door to club Tribe is Play ( Church St., / Wed.-Sun. 9pm-3am, $8 on drag show nights), the city’s highest-energy gay club, with drag shows and performances by adult-film stars. Though it is a homosexual bar, everyone is welcome as prolonged as they’re joyful to be here. The drag shows are quality, but it is the dance floor (right next to the stage) that draws people in. On weekends that sway floor is
Hours:
Monday: Closed
Tuesday: Closed
Wednesday–Thursday: 3pm–1am
Friday-Saturday: am–2am
Sunday: 12pm–1am
Parking:
FREE PARKING on Church Street, 15th Ave. N, 16th Ave. N, Hayes Street, and directly behind Tribe (limited spots available) (via the alley off of 15th Ave. North)
PAID PARKING available in designated spots at Williams Medical Supply. Please follow instuctions on pay machines to ensure your car will not be booted or towed.
DO NOT PARK AT THE FOLLOWING:
Jack Morris Auto Glass
Midtown Corkdorks
ANY Private Lot on McMillan Street
In Front of Garage Doors
North Side of Hayes Lane (Designated No Parking-Tow Zone)
YOU WILL BE TOWED. Parking areas patrolled by marked security
Our Management Team
Micah Bennett| Ryan Davis| Mykul Coscia | Joseph Haas
The Best LGBTQ+ Bars in Nashville
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The city’s first two recorded gay bars — the Jungle and Juanita’s — opened in Downtown Nashville in the s, where they served as havens for LGBTQ+ Nashvillians until the early s. A historical marker on Commerce Street and 7th Avenue memorializes their now-demolished buildings.
Today, you’ll find most LGBTQ+ establishments split between artsy East Nashville and the block of Church Street, located north of Music Row. A scant of the city’s low-key queer haunts are further afield, so plan on driving or taking a ride share if you want to see them all. Each offers something unique — be it Cheers-style camaraderie or high-level drag — making it worth exploring as much of the scene as possible. These are seven spots you won’t hope to miss.
Canvas
On October 31st, Canvas bid adieu to Church Street, where the quintessential queer space served an eclectic crew of Nashville’s alphabet mafi
A Nashville gay bar is organism forced out. That's one less safe space for LGBTQ people
- David Plazas is the director of opinion and engagement for the USA TODAY Network Tennessee.
Greggor Mattson, an Oberlin College professor, traveled across the United States to do research for his publication “Who Needs Gay Bars? Bar-Hopping through America’s Endangered LGBTQ+ Places.”
He bluntly told readers in a guest opinion column for The Washington Post in “The statistics is clear: gay bars are closing.”
Mattson documented a 45% plummet from to and provided a series of reasons, among them, dating apps that keep people at home, displacement because of rising rents and mainstream acceptance of the LGBTQ-plus community.
However, in Nashville, a city the creator did not visit for his book, there is a vibrant queer bar scene. But establishments own come and gone. There are historical markers honoring defunct bars such as Juanita’s and The Jungle on Commerce Avenue in downtown and one to be unveiled on June 14 on Franklin Pike for Warehouse 28, a disco turned first abode of Nashville CARES, the plus-year-old