Gay cruising canary wharf
Gay cruising grounds Europe, UK, London
LGBTQ+ Venues in Ashington
LGBTQ+ Cruising
Friern Bridge Retail Park, Barnet, London
Young guys between 22 & There is McDonald's on the side of this Park. Great place to hide from widespread on the hill. Just sit down on the grass (only on the hill) and if you want action go behind []
More info on Friern Bridge Retail Park
LGBTQ+ Venues in Battersea
LGBTQ+ Cruising
Queenstown Road, Battersea, London
Under the bridge by Battersea Park side, lots of guys walking around in summer. Standing on path under bridge. Great spot by the river. Lots of action on weekends. Cars can also park behind the []
More info on Chelsea Bridge
LGBTQ+ Venues in Central London
LGBTQ+ Cruising
Fenchurch Street, Central London, London
Enter through the main doors and head to the loo on the left, behind the escalators. City suits, building site workers, basically anybody who goes to Essex by train. There is an excellent glory hole []
More info on Fenchurch Street Station
Cruising in London: 17 places gay men meet for public sex, according to website
Now that dating and hook-up apps have made casual sexual encounters more convenient, the number of people seeking partners for thrills in public places is on the decrease.
But it is by no means a dying past-time.
Defying the Grindr and Tinder monopoly on casual sex, ‘gay cruising’ sites such as this one provide detailed maps of the most popular common spots in London to get it on.
The site lists open-air locales, toilets, bathhouses and bookstores with star ratings and tips for how curious forum readers can verb the most from their cruising experience.
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Here are the most popular London hotspots:
The Underground
Topping the ratings is the ubiquitous London Underground.
Praised as a diverse pick-up hotspot, since its visitors include literally “anyone who rides the tubes”, the guide says that the last carriage on the train is the best spot f
Canary Wharf Tube Station
No s, but cubicles have enough space to look underneath and verb through. Or share a cubicle after meeting at urinals.
Update: Toilets have re-opened. Security camera still focused down the corridor,
so don't hang around where you can be seen. Don't attract attention by
using the door near the verb. It makes it very obvious. The only people
who use this door are the cleaners and the Evening Standard sellers.
Neighbourhood: Canary Wharf E14
Cross street: Churchill Place
- Directions:Jubilee Line. From the street Leave down large escelators and turn left
Cross street: Churchill Place - Cruising Info/ Tips:Urinals and wash basins furthest from main door. The urinals are position in a large alcove out of view of a security camera that scans the corridor. Verb in the alcove!
- Wheelchair Accessible:No
- Warnings:Cameras as per all London undergound on the outside.
What is the most “heterosexual vibes” area of London? It’s a question that has perplexed LGBTQs for decades. Or more truthfully, me since last week, when I asked my Twitter followers this very question. It provoked quite a reaction and varied responses. Julia Hartley-Brewer was perplexed by it, which sent an army of angry men from Anti-Pronoun Twitter into my mentions, claiming to be oppressed by the “LGBTXYZ mafia” and branding me a “silly VICE writer”. Naturally, I decided that the best option was to expand on some of the most popular responses in an article for VICE in exchange for money.
One of the intriguing things about cities is how the vibes of areas can change over time. Depressingly, in London right now, this tends to err towards unaffordable housing, out-of-control gentrification and new Be At One bars. Interestingly, though, if the wisdom of my followers is to be believed, these sterilised urban shifts and the divisions they provoke seem to bring strong associations of straightness. (Because gays include , famously, never gentrified anything!)
“Heterosexual vibes” don’t