Buenos Aires' nightlife is one of the most active in the world. Nightlife really means 'night'-life with the young and wealthy porteños, as they usually only embark on their evening's entertainment after eating around 2200. They'll while away a few hours in a bar or cafe and won't even contemplate entering a club until gone 0200 when partying will just be warming up. Drunkenness among the locals is almost unheard of as the porteños only consume moderate amounts of alcohol. Dress is smart, but the extent of the formality depends on the club and the area. The legal drinking age is 18 years.
Palermo continues to be popular with the fashionable crowd, especially the areas of Las Cañitas and Palermo Hollywood, which are packed with trendy bars, clubs and restaurants. The streets surrounding La Recoleta Cemetery are also good places to go out, especially at the weekends when the pavement bars and cafes remain busy until the action moves to the nearby clubs. A number of drinking options, including English and Irish pubs, exist on and around Calle Reconquista and Avenida 25 de Mayo, while San Telmo is a focal point for Bohemian bars and tango shows. Puerto Madero has become increasingly popular for sunset drinks and dining.
Nightlife is at its peak Thursday to Saturday but there's always something happening throughout the week. Bars and clubs offer a range of music and entertainment options to meet all tastes, from tango shows to techno nightclubs.
Bars: Many bars offer food and live music so sometimes it is difficult to make a distinction between a place offering straightforward drinks and those pertaining to be restaurants or live music venues. La Cigale, Avenida 25 de Mayo 722, is a lively bar in the city centre attracting the young with its promise of live music and DJs. Also in the centre is Buenos Aires' longest established wine bar, Gran Bar Danzon, Libertad 1161, which is a fashionable place to sip Argentine wines and cocktails. Voodoo Bar, Calle Baez 340, is a trendy spot with comfortable armchairs and a lively dancefloor. Another popular place, in Hollywood, the trendy part of Palermo is, Único, Calle Honduras 5604, which lures revellers with loud music.
Clubs: Crobar, Paseo de la Infantana Isabel (website: www.crobar.com), and New York City, Calle Alvarez Thomas, both in Palermo, are just two of the established ‘mega-clubs' where you can dance to mainstream house music amid a smartly dressed, wealthy set. Kika, Honduras 5339, Palermo Hollywood (website: www.kikaclub.com.ar), is a long-standing hotspot in this nocturnal wonderland, while Tequila, Costanera Norte, is one of the most exclusive venues in the city. For the super-club experience and the very best in national and international dance music DJs, head to Pacha, Costanera Norte and La Pampa (website: www.pachabuenosaires.com). Opera Bay, Cecilia Grierson 225, is a lively spot overlooking the docks that gets crowded almost every night of the week.
Live Music: A great many of the city's bars and clubs offer live music as part of their menu, but good options include the Café Tortoni, Avenida De Mayo 825 (website: www.cafetortoni.com.ar). The most famous cafe in the city, it offers live tango and jazz in La Bodega downstairs. It's easy to become sucked into the tango obsession that prevails in the capital and there are numerous venues to listen to, watch or participate in tango. El Viejo Almacén, Avenida Independencia and Balcarce, San Telmo (website: www.viejo-almacen.com.ar), offers a tango dinner and show. But for a more reasonably priced and authentic taste of a tango, make your way to Bar Sur, Calle Estados Unidos 299, San Telmo (website: www.bar-sur.com.ar), where audience participation is encouraged. Tourists in search of live blues and rock should head to El Samovar de Rasputin or Del Valle Iberlucca in Caminito, La Boca. Jazz fans could try the Thelonious Bar, Calle Salguero 1884.
Palermo continues to be popular with the fashionable crowd, especially the areas of Las Cañitas and Palermo Hollywood, which are packed with trendy bars, clubs and restaurants. The streets surrounding La Recoleta Cemetery are also good places to go out, especially at the weekends when the pavement bars and cafes remain busy until the action moves to the nearby clubs. A number of drinking options, including English and Irish pubs, exist on and around Calle Reconquista and Avenida 25 de Mayo, while San Telmo is a focal point for Bohemian bars and tango shows. Puerto Madero has become increasingly popular for sunset drinks and dining.
Nightlife is at its peak Thursday to Saturday but there's always something happening throughout the week. Bars and clubs offer a range of music and entertainment options to meet all tastes, from tango shows to techno nightclubs.
Bars: Many bars offer food and live music so sometimes it is difficult to make a distinction between a place offering straightforward drinks and those pertaining to be restaurants or live music venues. La Cigale, Avenida 25 de Mayo 722, is a lively bar in the city centre attracting the young with its promise of live music and DJs. Also in the centre is Buenos Aires' longest established wine bar, Gran Bar Danzon, Libertad 1161, which is a fashionable place to sip Argentine wines and cocktails. Voodoo Bar, Calle Baez 340, is a trendy spot with comfortable armchairs and a lively dancefloor. Another popular place, in Hollywood, the trendy part of Palermo is, Único, Calle Honduras 5604, which lures revellers with loud music.
Clubs: Crobar, Paseo de la Infantana Isabel (website: www.crobar.com), and New York City, Calle Alvarez Thomas, both in Palermo, are just two of the established ‘mega-clubs' where you can dance to mainstream house music amid a smartly dressed, wealthy set. Kika, Honduras 5339, Palermo Hollywood (website: www.kikaclub.com.ar), is a long-standing hotspot in this nocturnal wonderland, while Tequila, Costanera Norte, is one of the most exclusive venues in the city. For the super-club experience and the very best in national and international dance music DJs, head to Pacha, Costanera Norte and La Pampa (website: www.pachabuenosaires.com). Opera Bay, Cecilia Grierson 225, is a lively spot overlooking the docks that gets crowded almost every night of the week.
Live Music: A great many of the city's bars and clubs offer live music as part of their menu, but good options include the Café Tortoni, Avenida De Mayo 825 (website: www.cafetortoni.com.ar). The most famous cafe in the city, it offers live tango and jazz in La Bodega downstairs. It's easy to become sucked into the tango obsession that prevails in the capital and there are numerous venues to listen to, watch or participate in tango. El Viejo Almacén, Avenida Independencia and Balcarce, San Telmo (website: www.viejo-almacen.com.ar), offers a tango dinner and show. But for a more reasonably priced and authentic taste of a tango, make your way to Bar Sur, Calle Estados Unidos 299, San Telmo (website: www.bar-sur.com.ar), where audience participation is encouraged. Tourists in search of live blues and rock should head to El Samovar de Rasputin or Del Valle Iberlucca in Caminito, La Boca. Jazz fans could try the Thelonious Bar, Calle Salguero 1884.
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