Showing 1-17 of 17 results
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13th Floor
This is one of the smoothest spots in the city to get your club on: atop the Gothic Belvedere Hotel, with fresh tracks, unbeatable views and a classy elevator ride waiting when you're ready to go home. Also in the Belvedere, the Owl Bar is a nostalgic throwback to '50s Baltimore, with a long wooden bar that attracts a martini-sipping crowd.
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Claddagh Pub
The crowds at Claddagh work hard to confirm ugly stereotypes about the Irish by trying to consume their volume in alcohol at this Disney-fied Dublin pub.
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Club Charles
Filled with hipsters displaying the breed's usual skinny jeans/vintage T-shirt plumage, normals also flock here to enjoy good tunes and cheap drinks in one of the best decorated bars in Maryland: red, red, red, heaven and hell motif, more red. If you don't look deadly cool under the Charles' lights, sorry my friend: you are lame.
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Club Phoenix
A more laid-back (not that laid-back, though) spot that aims to be friendly and pretension-free.
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DSX
If you find American sport boring, you won't after getting silly and tanked with rabid Baltimore fans at this bar, which is within projectile-vomit distance of Camden Yards .
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Fletcher's
Inhale the dried-beer scent on the walls with the pretty youngsters and rough, amiable oldsters who come here, one of the best rock stages in town.
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Good Love Bar
Think dark, sexy lighting; think three floors of cushy, lounge-and-flirt furniture; think music that manages to mingle black and white clubbers like few other places in Baltimore, and you've thought up Good Love.
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Grand Central
More of a complex than a club, whatever your taste, one of Central's areas (dance floor, pub, video bar, and leather-and-Levi's club) is sure to suit your fancy.
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Hippo
This is the city's largest gay club, with ladies' and men's tea, cabaret and crazy themed dance nights.
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Howl at the Moon
Howl stands out from the cookie-cutter clubs of Power Plant Live with its innovative theme: a call-in piano bar where the audience forces an ivory-masher/crooner to improvise the entertainment all night long.
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Little Havana
A good after-work spot and a better place to sip mojitos (rum- and lime-base drink), Little Havana attracts the sort of young professional who just know there's a salsa goddess deep in their soul.
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Max's on Broadway
Nothing says 'cute waterfront restoration' like the cobblestone streets of Fell's Point, and nothing says 'pesudo-Bacchanalian orgy' like the crowds that stumble down those streets into this bar. Max's enormous beer menu makes Belgium kinda jealous.
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Mick O'Shea's
Your standard paraphernalia-festooned Irish pub, with live Irish music Wednesday through Saturday. Maryland Governor (and former Baltimore mayor) Martin O'Malley used to play here.
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Mother's
Here's a classic Baltimore neighbourhood bar and grill where the drinks flow freely; you'll be called 'Hon' more than once and the Purple Patio is the meeting spot for wing specials and pre- and post-Ravens game discussions.
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One-Eyed Mike's
Yar! They be pirates at this seedy, drunk-as-a-sailor-on-shore-leave pub, and if ye want, they be stowing away a bottle of Grand Marnier for ye in a glass display case, which ye can drink from whenever ye return. Now walk the plank, or something.
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Owl Bar
A nostalgic throwback to 50s Baltimore, the first floor Owl Bar has a long wooden bar - just like the one in The Shining - that attracts a big martini-sippin' university crowd. When you're done drinking here, check out the upstairs bar, on the 13th floor.
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Thirsty Dog Pub
Marylanders really love drinking with their dogs. After you've made the rounds petting the canine clientele, grab a delicious brew (or two for around US$3 ) and try to snag the cozy fireside nook in the back. Excellent pizza, too.
Showing 1-17 of 17 results






