Bassiani is not just a club. In the context of Georgian LGBTQ+ life, it is something closer to a sanctuary ? a space where the social rules of the wider city are suspended, where queer people can be visible without fear, and where the music, the darkness, and the shared physicality of the dance floor create a temporary world that feels entirely different from the street outside. That it has also become one of the most internationally acclaimed techno venues in Europe is partly a consequence of that intensity. The venue occupies the former Olympic swimming pool in the basement of the Soviet-era Dinamo stadium, a setting that gives it a scale and acoustic character unlike almost any other club. The main floor is a vast, arched concrete space ? the pool's dimensions converted into a dance floor that can hold over a thousand people ? with a sound system that is among the best in Europe. The darkness is total; the visual language is minimal; the music does the work. DJs from Georgia, from the European circuit, and from the international techno community play sets that run through the night and into the following day, with the peak hour arriving somewhere around 4 or 5am. The door policy is famously selective on aesthetic grounds ? Bassiani's team looks for people who are there for the music and the community, not for spectacle ? but within the club, the inclusivity is genuine and comprehensive. Gay men, lesbians, straight Georgians, international visitors, trans people, non-binary people, all are present in roughly equal measure, and the club's explicit positioning as a queer-friendly space has made it a magnet for Tbilisi's LGBTQ+ community since its opening in 2014. In 2018, Bassiani and the adjacent Caf? Gallery became the scene of a pivotal moment in Georgian history when police raided both venues searching for drugs. The community response ? thousands of ravers gathering outside the parliament building in what became known as the 'rave revolution' ? was one of the most dramatic demonstrations of counter-cultural solidarity in post-Soviet history and substantially raised the club's international profile. The venue has operated without major interruption since. Practical information: Bassiani operates on Friday and Saturday nights from approximately 11pm, with the doors often open through Sunday evening for marathon sessions. Entry is by face control at the door ? dress code is dark, practical, and unfussy; avoid anything overtly tourist or casual. Bring cash for the entrance fee (typically 20?40 GEL depending on the night). The cloakroom is essential; the bar is basic. Photography is strictly prohibited ? phones are stickered at the door.
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