• Friends enjoying karaoke night, singing in a nightclub with colorful lights and shiny decorations
    Provided by: Unai Huizi Photography/shutterstock

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Theatron

Theatron

Theatron is a gay bar, dance club, and nightclub complex. This club, housed in a former cinema, is spread across 5 levels with 13 different club rooms. Each room has its own theme such as the 80’s room, the Salsa room, Reggae dance floor and more. There's even a dance floor only for women! Although the club is the central point of the gay community of Bogota, it is by no means exclusive — as everyone is welcome. Theatron is often described as the largest gay-themed club night in Latin America that can allow up to 5,000 people on Saturday night.It is an absolute must do.
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Andrés Carne de Res

Andrés Carne de Res

Andrés Carne de Res has been described as a "Cheesecake Factory crossed with a nightclub on steroids". It is an iconic restaurant, bar and club that is an absolute must for any self-respecting nightlife aficionado. You can start the night with an early dinner. The party gets going early, around 9pm, and soon takes over the several floors of this eclectic venue. The original venue is located in the suburb called Chia about 45 km from the centre of Bogotá. Totally worth the drive! If you are short on time, you can try the other venue near Zona Rosa.
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Gringo Tuesdays

Gringo Tuesdays

Gringo Tuesdays at is less a language exchange than a weekly cultural collision. What began in 2011 as three friends’ experiment now draws 2,500 locals and travellers every Tuesday — first for halting conversations over board games, later for salsa-spiked DJ sets. The evening unfolds in two acts: in the afternoon, tables divide by language (French on the patio, German by the bar) and skill level, with coordinators nudging shy participants into conversation. By 9pm, the textbooks vanish as the dancefloor takes over. You’ll find rooms thrumming with reggaeton, house and questionable DJ transitions that somehow add to the charm. It’s messy, multilingual, and unapologetically geared towards twenty- and thirty-somethings. The organisers lean into the chaos, whether it’s a Swede teaching Colombian slang or a spontaneous conga line forming during a bass drop. Come for the language practice, stay because you’ve accidentally befriended a Venezuelan poet and lost track of time.
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