Big city gayborhoods: where they come from and why they still matter.
In London, there is Soho; in New York, Chelsea and Greenwich Village; and in San Francisco, there is the Castro. In Sydney, there is Darlinghurst and, more specifically, Oxford Street. These are neighbourhoods of large cities that have, since at least the 1950s and often earlier, developed a reputation as queer spaces.
In more recent years, those reputations have begun to fade and the enduring meanings of the βgayborhoodβ have come into question.
But what each of these places represents is the centrality of urban space to the emergence of visible, βout and proudβ lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer identities and communities.

Queer Sydney in the βGolden Mileβ era
The peak years of Oxford Streetβs queer life extended from the mid-1970s until the mid-1990s. In the years after the second world war, many gay men in Sydney socialized in CBD hotels, including the Hotel Australia.
The first LGBTQ clubs on Oxford Street were Ivyβs Birdcage and Capriccioβs, which both opened in 1969. By the beginning of the 1980s, Oxford Street was home to a string of bars, clubs, saunas and cafes and had become known as Sydneyβs gay βGolden Mileβ.
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The emergence of this gay heartland represents extraordinary social change. Male homosexuality remained illegal in New South Wales until 1984. The homosexual men socializing in 1950s CBD hotels were required to do so with discretion β the consequences of discovery could be devastating.
In contrast, the queerness of a venue like Capriccioβs was defiantly visible and undeniable. As more venues were opened along the Golden Mile, the street itself became a gay space, as did the surrounding neighborhoods where LGBTQ people β particularly gay men β made homes in the terraces and apartments of Darlinghurst and Paddington.
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A simple walk along the street became an act of participation in an emerging community.
Members of a marginalized social group were thus using urban space to resist oppression and build a community. For some, this produced a kind of utopia. In an interview with Sydneyβs Pride History Group, DJ Stephen Allkins described his first visit to the Oxford Street disco Patchβs as a teenager in 1976. He remembers:
I was home. That was it. It was the most fabulous place Iβd ever been in my life β¦ Itβs full of gay people and theyβre all dressed to the nines. Theyβre not hiding under a rock β¦ Theyβre expressing and happy.
Finding a place in the queer community
But these feelings of joy at having found such a space can be complicated by a range of factors. The gay community was certainly not free from sexism, racism and transphobia, meaning that some within the LGBTQ community were granted far easier access to these spaces than others.
Indeed, although Golden Mile-era Oxford Street included venues popular with lesbians, including the women-only bar Ruby Reds, the surrounding neighborhood was more identifiably gay than lesbian.
Inner-west suburbs including Leichhardt and Petersham were far more significant urban spaces in the lives of many queer women. Lesbian share-houses in these neighborhoods became central sites of feminist politics, activism, sex and romance.
Penny Gulliver, a resident of legendary 1970s share-house βCrystal Streetβ, has remembered that women βwho were just coming out, because there was nothing like a counseling service then, theyβd come to Crystal Streetβ.
Into the new millennium, Oxford Streetβs place as the gay heart of Sydney became less certain. As LGBTQ businesses failed and venues closed, questions emerged as to whether a community now more a part of the mainstream still needed its own spaces.
For a time, King Street in Newtown dominated as a queer alternative. In 1983 gay publican Barry Cecchini took over the Milton Hotel on Newtownβs King Street, renamed it Cecchiniβs and launched it as the areaβs first gay venue. Shortly after, the Newtown Hotel, just across the road, also became a gay pub. Cecchini told the Sydney Morning Herald in 1984 that gays were leaving βthe sceneβ of Oxford Street looking for a βmore cosmopolitan mixβ in Newtown.
Through the following decades, venues including The Imperial in Erskineville (made famous as the site from which three drag queens launched their adventures in a bus named Priscilla) and the Sly Fox in Enmore, home to a popular lesbian night, further developed the areaβs queer reputation.
Protecting queer space
In recent years, however, a range of factors, including changes to licensing laws, have produced significant challenges for queer socializing in that neighborhood.
Newtown sits outside the zone of the so-called βlockout lawsβ. Late-night partiers who might once have ventured to Kings Cross are instead heading to pubs along King Street, and reports of anti-LGBTQ abuse and violence have increased.
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In response, a campaign called βKeep Newtown Weird and Safeβ has attempted to maintain the queer meanings of this urban space.
Keep Newtown Weird and Safe is an annual community festival that began in 2016 in response to homophobic and transphobic violence.
Despite changes in Oxford and King streets, efforts to keep Newtown βweirdβ highlight the continued value of urban space to LGBTQ communities. Indeed, among a younger generation, new forms of queer identity continue to inspire the search for spaces in which to celebrate difference.
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In pockets of the inner west, for example, young queer, transgender and genderqueer people are creating spaces of activism, partying, performance and everyday life. This new generation is exploring the fresh possibilities of queer identity and developing their community. Access to urban space remains central to this.
Like the city itself, the LGBTQ community continues to be less a fixed entity than a process of movement, adaptation and change.
Scott McKinnonΒ is the Vice-Chancellor’s Postdoctoral Research Fellow at theΒ University of Wollongong.