Austin

A self-assured bastion of liberal thinking, the capital of Texas has a laid-back atmosphere in the middle of the beautiful Texas hill and lake country, a hot and dreamy place where your inner clock may slow a little, and your sleep deepen a bit.

No longer a secret, this progressive, laid-back city of 1.8 million has much more than a little something for everyone. Whether you want a hot restaurant scene, cutting-edge culture, incredible live music on tap, excellent shopping, easy access to outdoor activities or an excess of offbeat character, Austin offers it up by the 10 gallon. Add to that the facts that Austin happens to be surrounded by increasingly prolific wine country and that it hosts a couple of legendary LGBT beach parties each year, and this quirky, colorful character of a city becomes downright irresistible.

If you coincide with them, two annual events will hugely influence your trip: SXSW, and the Austin City Limits summer music festival. The first sees the city swarmed by film, music and interactive-media types in March, the second might fry cajones with temperatures that remain high, even during the early October dates

Austin lives and breathes live music. Explore Red River and Sixth Street music districts or head straight for the best of country at The White Horse tavern, eclectic sounds at The Sahara Lounge and big-name acts at the Paramount Theatre.

For something a little more highbrow, Austin offers a clutch of excellent museums and performance companies, including The Contemporary Austin and the Blanton Art Museum; plus the Long Center for the Performing Arts, home to the Austin Symphony, and the world-class Ballet Austin. The hottest shopping opportunities are found at The Domain, a 65,000-square-metre spree sensation, and in the independent boutiques of the Second Street District.

If you’re on your second trip to town, you have a bit longer to spend, or you’re just too hot, Lake Travis, situated beyond the western brim of the city, is the perfect place to swim or kayak. Head for queer-popular Hippie Hollow, the site of Labor Day weekends’ clothing-optional Splash parties. The park offers more than 100 swimming holes. The gay beach is a 15-minute walk left from the car park.

To really see why everyone’s talking about Austin, make for the trend-central trio of neighborhoods: quirky South Congress (South Austin’s main drag), slightly more grown-up Travis Heights and diverse East Austin. All three are a little overrun with recently arrived 20-something hipsters, although the honor of hosting this oft-maligned tribe has mostly percolated over to East Austin. This gentrifying area has relatively recently wrestled the title of hippest ’hood from South Congress and Travis Heights — if you measure these things by dive bars, taco trucks, farmers’ markets, folks with ironic facial hair on single-speed bikes and a triple-the-national-average percentage of the population in the creative professions. But it’s not all fixies and bird-friendly caffeine fixes; the three areas also offer excellent bars, incredible music venues, captivating coffee spots and enticing eateries, plus all are very LGBT-friendly. Downtown and Clarksville are other queer-adored neighborhoods.

Austin is definitely quirky, compared to the concrete canyons of Houston, conservative Dallas or, well, just about anywhere else in the state. Bumper stickers proudly declare “Keep Austin Weird,” and it seems Austinites really do. Some of the city’s weirder bits include the Cathedral of Junk, a 60-ton multilevel, vaulted vegetation and junk-castle creation in a South Austin backyard; the Little Longhorn Saloon in Allandale, home of the weekly Chicken Shit Bingo; or the nearby Lala’s Little Nugget, an emphatically anti-Grinch bar where it’s always Christmas. Another oddity is the achingly hip Bananarchy frozen banana stand, a must for Arrested Development fans. And there’s Ms P’s Electric Cock fried-chicken stand. And mustache-themed HandleBar. And . . . and . . . it’s Austin: the list of offbeat attractions just goes on and on.

 

Getting here

From Austin-Bergstrom International Airport, the “Airport Flyer,” also known as Bus 100, departs every 10 minutes or so from the lower level and heads to downtown and beyond. For info see CapMetro

 

Getting around

A car is the easiest way to get around, but Capital Metro Transit has Red Line rail service for 32 miles and nine stations between Leander and Downtown. They also have buses to get you around for a dollar a trip, or $2 per day, once you're downtown.

 

Neighborhoods

Broad acceptance in the general community means there’s no distinctively gay district, so business establishments here are spread about more than in most cities.

SoCo, the South Congress Street area between Johanna and Gibson Streets, has an eclectic array of shops, restaurants, boutiques, antiques, music venues and art galleries. First Thursday is an all-ages block party here, with special sales prices and free drinks until 10pm.

The Second Street District is a 6-block strip north of Town Lake, with over 50 specialty stores, services, coffee shops, wine bars, and restaurants. Travis Heights and East Austin are two more of the "hippest ‘hoods" in town.

 

Media & Resources

The Austin Chronicle newspaper has the best general and gay listings, in print and online.

L Style and G Style are the twin gay lifestyle magazines for the area.

Austin Pride week takes place each September with a rally, a festival, a parade from the State Capitol, and other events around town.

The Lone Star Bears have parties and social events throughout the year, including the Austin Chill Weekend in March.

For general tourism information, see AustinTexas.

For map locations and website links to the businesses below, and more, see our gay Austin listings pages.

 

Accommodations

110 Carriage House Inn (1110 W 22-1/2 St; 512-472-2333), downtown convenience, restored wooden colonial cottage, guesthouse and traditional rooms; organic foods full breakfast.

Austin Motel (1220 S Congress; 512- 441- 1157), with 76 years in business, a totally unique place to stay, with pool and bike rentals, in the middle of an eclectic mix of shops, restaurants and entertainment venues; the neon phallic logo beckons: 'so close yet so far out.'

San Jose Hotel (1316 South Congress; 512-693-9317), chic, renovated, with minimalist interiors and handmade furniture; central location, hip vibe, patio bar and cafe.

St Cecilia (112 Academy Dr, SoCo; 512-852-2400), inspired by William Burroughs, the Stones, Miro and Andy Warhol, suites, studios, poolside bungalows, full breakfast, private terrace.

For another dozen hotels and guesthouses in Austin, see our listings and map.

 

Bars and clubs

Barbarella (611 Red River St), mixed video lounge and dance club, Indie, Rock, '80s night; TuezGayz hosted by theGlitoris

'Bout Time II (6607 I-35 N Frontage Rd), neighborhood mixed party bar, nightly buffets/ burgers, pool games/ tournaments, karaoke, TV sports.

Chain Drive (84 East Ave), men's hangout, live punk and alternative music nights, karaoke, weekly Texas Hold Em games, Sunday Tea Dances, patio.

Cheer Up Charlie's (900 Red River St), young and queer, "backyard party vibe," vegan fare, fresh juice, organic wine, local brews, live music, kombucha on tap.

Iron Bear (121 W 8th St), bar for bear and friends, 18+ events, DJs, live music, karaoke, special parties including Lone Star Bears' and Bearracuda events.

Oilcan Harry's (211 W 4th St), uninhibited men's dance bar, Tuesday and Friday hot dancers, Thursday amateur Strip Off, Sunday Super Divas Show, TV sports, karaoke, blacklight underwear parties, Texas Hold'em games.

Rain (217 B W 4th St), energetic and diverse crowd, open nightly, live band and karaoke nights,Thursday 18+ male amateur strip-off contests.

CLOSED: Hush, Lipstick 24, Rainbow Cattle Company, Rusty Spurs, Sister's Edge, Town 'n Country, and Kiss & Fly Austin.

 

Restaurants

Alamo Drafthouse Cinema (1120 S Lamar Blvd) and Alamo Drafthouse/ The Ritz (320 East 6th, Downtown), dinner, cold beer and wine, movies, and events including LGBT Film Festival screenings.

El Sol y la Luna (600 E 6th) all-day breakfast, Mexican bar and cafe with live music.

Iron Cactus North (10001 Stonelake Blvd), and Iron Cactus Downtown (606 Trinity St), Mexican grill and margarita bar with patio, various regional cuisines, brunch, over 100 kinds of tequila.

Jackalope (404 E 6th) dogs, burgers; barbeque, chicken, steak sandwiches; po boys, veggie burgers, full bar.

Jo's SoCo (1300 S Congress) and Jo's Downtown (242 West 2nd St), two of their three locations for coffee, sandwiches, casual hangout with WiFi.

For more restaurants in Austin, see our listings and map.

 

Shopping

Forbidden Fruit (108 E North Loop Blvd), 'keeping Austin kinky' with products for a body's needs.

Tape Lenders (1114 W 5th St), gay videos, gifts, cards, magazines, aromas, cock rings, toys, leather and Neoprene wear, designer label swimwear and underwear.

 

Saunas and gyms

Midtowne Spa (5815 Airport Blvd), complete workout, men's bathhouse steam/sauna and recreational facilities, outdoor hot tub, open 24/7 for overnight stay options.

Gold's Gym (101 W 6th St) gay-popular gym, close by many gay establishments.

 

See our events lisitngs for Pride and other events in Austin.

- Staff - November 2014