Gay pride in houston 2022


Pride Month in Houston

Pride Month is a time to celebrate and come together as a community for a joyful revolution. Verify out our list of goings on around town to help you produce your Pride one to remember!


Pride Month Kickoff: Demonstrate Your Pride & Celebrate

May 29,

Get ready to kick off Pride Month with an evening of celebration, visibility, and community! Join the Greater Houston LGBTQ+ Chamber of Commerce at Eureka Heights Brewery for a fun noun featuring the Show Your Pride campaign launch, a rainbow market, drag Bingo, and an LGBTQ+ alumni mixer. Shop local, love delicious beer, and strive for prizes as drag queen Dessie Love Blake turns up the power with Bingo. This year&#x;s event will mark the second year for the alumni mixer, which is meant to promote connection and networking with LGBTQ+ Alumni from universities across the region.

Official Pride Market x Neon Boots

June 1,

Local Flavor. Big Affection. Get ready for a fabulous day of amusing, shopping, and celebration! All ages are welcome to this family-friendly funday. This official Pride Houston e

Image: Houstonia/Shutterstock/lazyllama

The first Pride march in New York City was held on June 28, , on the first anniversary of the Stonewall Uprising, the queer community’s response to a police raid at the Stonewall Inn in Manhattan, Adj York. The celebration would soon become “Gay & Lesbian Pride Month” in and , as declared by President Bill Clinton. Since then, Pride has become a month-long celebration including parades, parties and performances.

While the celebrations originate in New York, Houston has a rich history that deserves a celebration of its own. There are a handful of ways to celebrate Pride in the Bayou Capital, from amplifying queer voices in literature to celebrating at one of the many LGBTQ+ friendly bars in town. Not to mention the Magnum Opus of celebrations — the Houston Pride Festival and Parade, which are also making a comeback this month. 

We’ve culled through the city’s many happenings for Pride and compiled lists of events, venues and ways to support Houston’s queer community. 

 

How to Get to and Enjoy Both Pride Parades in Houston

Each year, thousands of people flock to the Houston Pride parade, and this year will look a little diverse, with two separate parades taking place on two different weekends. With a mass of floats filling the streets of Downtown Houston, it can be overwhelming to decide the best way to earn the most out of your parade experiences. Horror not&#x;we&#x;ve got you covered!

PARADE ROUTES

New Faces of Pride

New Faces of Pride is first out the gate, with their parade taking place on Saturday, June 22, at p.m. The parade map indicates the procession kicks off at the intersection of Smith and Lamar, with a brief turn down Walker before a long stretch down Milam.

Pride Houston

The 46th Annual Houston Pride Parade occurs on Saturday, June 29, at p.m. It begins at Bagby and Lamar and continues up Smith to Walker, where it will produce a right turn and run along Walker to Milam and continue down Milam to Pease Street.

TRANSPORTATION

METRORail in Houston

The Houston METRORail connects a number of different secti

Houston’s New Faces of Pride kicked off its inaugural Pride festival and parade Saturday, themed “Rainbow Revolution,” welcoming thousands of queer Houstonians to celebrate desire, authenticity, equality and LGBTQ+ pride. 

Hundreds of vendors lined up along Walker and McKinney streets to trade everything from food, to psychic readings and local secondhand clothing. Organizations fancy Equality Texas and the Greater Houston LGBTQ Chamber of Commerce were also on hand. The six-hour festival also had several cooling and water stations throughout the area. 

“It’s very well organized,” said Nicole Aponte, who frequently utilized the cooling stations located  within two stationary Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County buses. “And having the police around, everything seems so secure.”

Officials with New Faces expected roughly 5, to 10, attendees for the ticketed festival, which started at noon and ended at 6 p.m. They expected roughly 20, to attend the free parade. 

However, both portions combined brought an estimated 20, people. Despite that, organizers con