Register today! | Already registered? Sign in

traveldk.com

from Eyewitness Travel Guides: the world's bestselling travel guides
Member image
1. Empty guide

' Untitled'
includes 0 highlights.

  • Organize
Why register?
  1. Organize and personalize your very own tailor-made Travel Guide. Made by you, for you, with a little help from us.
  2. Publish these guides online to share your trip ideas with fellow travelers.
  3. When you return, add your own discoveries to the site and rate any of the attractions you visited.
Already Registered?

Seattle : Bars & Nightclubs

Submit an attraction

Make sure your favorite shops, restaurants, hotels and more are listed.

Submit an attraction illustration
Win a trip to Bolivia & Peru
Win a trip to Bolivia & Peru

Enter to win

Competition open to UK residents only

Join our free monthly newsletter

Advertisement

  • A more refined and higher priced outlet for fine baked goods and specialty coffees. They also make deluxe wedding cakes and have a full service bistro next door.

  • DJs spin alternative music, rock, and whatever they feel like, and revelers take in New Orleans-style voodoo art.

  • Savor San Francisco’s Caffe Trieste espresso and coffee along with delicious scones and croissants.

  • Draws young and old to sample handcrafted ales.

  • This club dominates the smoke-filled, hard rock scene on Capitol Hill, but does so with style and flair. Glowing red lights and lanterns shed a bit of light, while images of Bruce Lee add to the kitschy theme. Most of the acts are local or regional rock outfits, although hip-hop rules on Sunday nights.

  • In a city that has turned coffee retailers into millionaires, this tiny café began as a nonprofit enterprise. They also host live music nights.

  • A legendary hangout for rockers and great pretenders alike. It’s just a tavern with some pool tables, but the crowd, the location, and the stories etched into tabletops tell a different tale.

  • The only multidisciplinary contemporary arts center in the Pacific Northwest is housed in a cavernous space large enough for jumbo jet assembly. ConWorks brings artists and patrons together with the philosophy that all creative art forms speak one language. The facility includes three artist-in-residence studios, a 150-seat theater, the 50-seat movie hall, a 6,000-ft (1,829-m) visual art space, and a café.

  • This Belltown café opened in the early 1990s, just after major Seattle bands such as Nirvana, Soundgarden, and Mudhoney changed the face of rock music. It’s still a destination for new talented bands, local or touring, appealing to audiences who favor college rock radio and singer-songwriters. Features inexpensive fare, and the owner’s husband happens to be Peter Buck of R.E.M.

Advertisement

 Latest guides