Which city has more theatres than New York, more artists than Paris, and a gay and lesbian scene to rival San Francisco? Home to Europe's largest gay and lesbian population, London remains a hot spot for the discerning international gay traveler. And with more than 300 languages spoken (though you’ll need just the one) and nearly a third of the population born outside of the country, you don’t get much more international.
The British capital’s eight-million-plus population features established Asian, South Asian, African and West Indian communities, partly the result of Britain’s once vast empire. Yet for a city of such a scale, London feels convincingly intimate and unthreatening, much of it down to its village-like atmosphere spread across 32 boroughs, each with individual and local character. The city might lack the crazed energy of New York City, but it offers a unique cocktail of sophistication, understatement, spark and unbridled hedonism.
London does not have a gay ghetto per se but Soho comes closest, with its mix of restaurants, patisseries, Italian food shops, specialty businesses and a frisky red light district effortlessly rubbing up against dozens of gay bars, pubs, food stops and sex shops. Its main drag, Old Compton St., plays catwalk to uninhibited cruising and occasional outrageousness that the greater public have come to expect from the area. And if Soho has replaced Earls Court as London’s gay mecca, then the south-of-the-river upstart Vauxhall fancies itself as giving Soho a run for its money. But gay Vauxhall is predominantly nocturnal, with big sweaty dance clubs, pubs and leather and fetish dens pumping life into an otherwise barren area where in daylight cars far outnumber the traffic on the sidewalks.
In London one is seldom far from a gay pub, bar or club, with literally hundreds of venues throughout the capital. And the city’s comprehensive bus, underground train (The Tube) and overground train network will get you there in comfort, though it is imperative to buy an Oyster travel card because paying in cash for a bus or tube ride can at least double the cost. The Tube shuts down between midnight and 5:30am, but buses run through the night--from and to Trafalgar Square--and provide a reliable alternative to cabs, which London is renowned for but which will eat into your club cash. Pubs tend to stop serving at 11pm, but many clubs operate until the sun comes up and beyond.
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