“It was like we had just opened again, but in a neighborhood that didn’t know we were here,” Adams said. But business was down by two-thirds compared to the previous year. Lumber Yard was able to hold on, but barely.Īfter three months closed, Nathan Adams, who opened Lumber Yard in early 2018 with his husband, Michale Farrar, was able to reopen in June. They closed in March 2020 and were unable to reopen. But the pandemic hit hard and took Swallow with it. Health officials appeared optimistic that the expected June 30 reopening will not be rolled back.Ī little over a year ago, two gay bars, The Lumber Yard and Swallow Bar, faced each other across 16th Avenue SW, in a neighborhood that seemed to be gaining traction in the West Seattle LGBTQ community as a more convenient and laid-back alternative to the Capitol Hill nightlife scene. This week, the one-shot vaccination rate hovered near 68%. State officials, including the governor, promised to reopen earlier, if 70% of Washingtonians age 16 and older got at least one coronavirus shot. Jay Inslee's announcement that Washington state will completely reopen by June 30, although some wish they would have had more definite information earlier for planning purposes and worry about future rollbacks. Others, though, were able to reopen or have plans to open soon, effectively extending Pride month festivities into July.īusiness owners are cautiously buoyed by Gov. Seattle’s queer bar scene has been precarious in recent years and 2020 struck the final blow to several long-standing LGBTQ haunts including Re-bar and R Place, which lost its lease and is still in search of a new location. According to a survey by the Washington Hospitality Association, 2,369 bars and restaurants across the state closed permanently over the first six months of the pandemic, 1,023 of those in King County alone. The last year was devastating for the hospitality industry statewide. “It was awful, it was traumatic, but it was an opportunity to make change.” “Your life was ripped away from you,” she told the room.
After her number, she takes the mic and the mood shifts as she begins to address the reason we haven’t been able to enjoy a live show like this in so long. “I live for the applause, applause, applause” Lady Gaga confesses through pumping speakers as 7-foot-tall Dolly, née Derik Kleinhesselink, works the room in black stilettos and a pink wig.