Gay bars in indy

When I began Queer Circle City, my mission was to connect the collective to people, places and events in our history. What I am constantly amazed by are the places that offered a safe space, education or simply a dance floor in the midst of 20th century homophobia or during the onset of the AIDS epidemic. 

These five places existed in those times. From a Victorian house in the Antique Northside to a bathhouse blocks away from the Indiana Statehouse, the bygone locations not only stood as a testament to the LGBTQIA+ community, they were instrumental to our basic survival and a blueprint to understand our rich, indelible history. 

1. The Body Works, 303 N. Senate Ave.

From 1977-1988: The Body Works was started by Stan Berg in late 1977, blocks away from the Statehouse. The simple bathhouse quickly grew into a vinyl store, bookstore, discotheque and hub for THE WORKS magazine (1981-1990). Berg was a force of nature in the LGBTQIA+ community, splitting his efforts between The Body Works and representation outside of its walls, such as Gay Knights on The Circle, which promoted an end to police harassment of homosexual and lesbian women on Monument Circle. 

The Body Works became inst

Indy Pride weekend is here - where's the afterparty? 

Across the city, the gay community has historically utilized bars and event spaces as life-saving sanctuaries for self-expression. There’s a little something for everyone!

Photo: Metro Nightclub

Metro Nightclub & Restaurant 

Mass Ave | 707 Massachusetts Ave

Located right on Mass Ave, Metro offers excellent food, dancing, and outdoor seating. Pregame your night out with a chew to eat or dance all evening until the lights come on, either way the musics great so you'll never have a bad time. 


Photo: Tini

Tini

Mass Ave | 717 Massachusetts Ave

Metro's next-door neighbor is also an LGBTQ+ nightclub called Tini! With a slightly smaller downstairs bar and dance floor upstairs, the chances of running into your ex here triples. 


Downtown Olly's 

Downtown | 822 N Illinois St. 

Downtown Olly's used to be open 24/7, but now you can enjoy it from 7AM - 3AM daily. Their patio is the spot to be in June with events going on all the time! 


Photo: Visit Indy

Gregs 

Herron Morton | 231 E 16th St. 

Gregs is a Stalwart same-sex attracted bar with outdoor seating, entertainment,

Indianapolis gay bars: 7 spaces made for the LGBTQ+ community

Indianapolis businesses that cater directly to the LGBTQ+ community provide performance opportunities for artists, such as drag performers and DJs, good sustenance and drinks, and safe spaces to gather.

Gay bars and restaurants are important because, in establishments made without gender non-conforming people in brain, they may experience out of place or even be harassed, said James Alexander, assistant general manager at Almost Famous and a manager at Tini. Gay bars offer LGBTQ+ people members a place to go in which they can be comfortable and treated as humans, they said.

It’s essential that these spaces remain open, as a business and to the universal, so people in and outside of the LGBTQ+ community can enjoy the bars and experience homosexual culture, said Alexander, stage name Duchess Morningstar.

“There are people that haven’t enter out yet or don’t know anything about that and they can just walk off of the street,” they said.  

These are establishments in Indianapolis which cater directly to the Queer community:

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Gregs Our Place 

231 E 16th St., Indianapolis, IN 46202

The establis

Located at 231 E. 16th Lane, Gregs is one of the most popular gay bars in Indianapolis and is a frequent stage for drag performances. Indianapolis has had roughly fifty queer bars in the last limited decades, according to new data gathered by Indiana Landmarks. It is difficult to identify same-sex attracted bars because many of them have kept very low profiles, sometimes with shuttered windows and limited publicity, because of anti-LGBT+ policies and public opinion. Some remain concealed to this date, despite changing attitudes. While Gregs does not draw attention to itself as a public vacuum, it has a very widespread profile and presence in the city today.

The Beginning of Gregs

Gregs first opened on July 1, 1980, as the Wawasee Tavern. In 1992, Phil Denton purchased the bar and changed the name to Our Place. Denton transformed the space, which hosted several Leather and Bear Clubs, subcultures within the LGBT+ community known for their hyper-masculine image. The bar also hosted the T.G.I.F. Bowling Classic, the Circle City/Indy Cup Volleyball Tournament, the Halloween Bag Ladies bus tour and coronation, and other LGBT+ events.  

Operating for more than 34 years, the Indianapolis Bag Ladies