Gay village: Difference between revisions
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added Fire Island and Mykonos; added note about unfriendliness, see Talk |
Soho is not strictly a gay village |
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*[[Toronto]]: Church & Wellesley |
*[[Toronto]]: Church & Wellesley |
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*[[Montreal]]: Le [[Village gai]] (rue Ste-Catherine, centered on Beaudry metro) |
*[[Montreal]]: Le [[Village gai]] (rue Ste-Catherine, centered on Beaudry metro) |
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*[[London]]: [[Soho, London, England|Soho]] |
*[[London]]: in [[Soho, London, England|Soho]], centered on Old Compton Street. |
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*[[Paris]]: Le Marais |
*[[Paris]]: Le Marais |
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*[[Madrid]]: Chueca |
*[[Madrid]]: Chueca |
Revision as of 20:14, 7 October 2002
A city's gay village is a district known for having a large Queer residential population and/or a concentration of businesses, nightlife, and services for Queer populations.
The term derives from New York City's Greenwich Village, one of the best known and the scene of the Stonewall Riots.
Here is a listing of some gay and lesbian villages:
- New York: Greenwich Village, Tribeca, Chelsea
- San Francisco: The Market District, esp. the Castro
- Washington DC: Dupont Circle
- Los Angeles: West Hollywood
- Chicago: Uptown neighborhood, AKA Boys Town
- Toronto: Church & Wellesley
- Montreal: Le Village gai (rue Ste-Catherine, centered on Beaudry metro)
- London: in Soho, centered on Old Compton Street.
- Paris: Le Marais
- Madrid: Chueca
- Barcelona: El Gaixample, also around Universitat metro
Furthermore, several towns, particularly resorts, are known as primarily gay areas, for example Key West, Florida; Provincetown, Massachusetts; Fire Island, New York; Mykonos, Greece; and Sitges, Catalonia, Spain. Many such resorts welcome their gay tourists and have many facilities for them, but not all of them (for example, Lesbos) appreciate the attention.
See also The Village People.