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South Beach is a nightclub with after hours located in Houston, Texas within the Neartown area which opened in 2001 on the former site of Club Heaven. The 10,000-square-foot (930 m 2 ) dance club located at 810 Pacific Street was popular among the city's gay community . [ 1 ]
Eldorado Ballroom is a former nightclub in the Third Ward, Houston, on the other side of the road from Emancipation Park. [1] The white brick and stucco Art Moderne building has 10,000 square feet (930 m 2) of space. [2] Caroline Love of Houston Public Media described it as "A pillar of Houston’s historic music scene". [3]
Meteor, also known as Meteor Houston, Meteor Nightclub, or Meteor Urban Video Lounge, [1] was a gay bar and nightclub in Neartown, [2] Houston, Texas, in the United States. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] The bar hosted an annual Mr. Gay Pride Houston competition.
The Houston Club is a private members' club in Houston, Texas. The club is managed by Inspired. The club has occupied six locations, the Mason Building (1894–1904), the Chronicle Building (1909–1923), the Chamber of Commerce Building I (1923–1930), the Chamber of Commerce Building II (1930–1955), the Houston Club Building (1955–2012 ...
Neon Boots Dancehall & Saloon is a Country and Western bar/honky tonk that was founded as the Esquire Ballroom in 1955 by Raymond Proske in Houston, Texas, at 11410 Hempstead northwest of downtown Houston.
Brazos River Bottom, also known as the BRB, was a gay bar located in the Midtown, Houston, Texas, United States, [1] [2] that opened in 1978. At the time of its closure in 2013, it was one of Houston's oldest gay bars, and the oldest still running at its original location.
JR's was a finalist in the following categories for the magazine's 2020 Readers’ Choice Awards: Best Drag-Show Bar, Favorite Community Bar, Favorite Men’s Bar, Favorite Place to Watch Male Dancers, Club or Restaurant with the Best Happy Hour, Club or Restaurant with the Best Martini; the bar won in the Favorite Bar to Shoot Pool category.
In 2019, it changed its name from Rich's Houston to ReBar Houston. [ 5 ] It was formerly in Midtown , [ 6 ] [ 7 ] in a 14,136-square-foot (1,313.3 m 2 ) facility that formerly housed the Richland Fan Company.