Zula RabikowskaLife & Culture / What Went DownLife & Culture / What Went DownLa Camionera: What went down at the opening of London’s new lesbian nightPhotographer Zula Rabikowska and writer Emily Crooked headed to Broadway Market to capture the launchShareLink copied ✔️February 16, 2024February 16, 2024TextEmily CrookedLa Camionera Around four weeks ago, rumblings emerged on social media of “a new lesbian bar on Broadway Market”: La Camionera (Spanish for “female truck driver”, but also, informally, a butch lesbian). Other than this, information was sparse, the marketing obscure and the owner tantalisingly anonymous. Where is it? What is it going to look like? Is it a full-time bar? Is it just a club night? And most importantly, whose ex is running it? The news captivated the lesbian rumour mill for weeks, reaching its dark and sexy climax last night. The opening served as a temperature check, an investigation into the interest in a London Fields lesbian bar. As it turned out, there was a lot of interest – the temperature was hot. The evening can be easily divided into two halves: the first comprised the hour between 5pm and 6pm, during which time the early and ever-punctual lesbians of east London filed into the candlelit boudoir. They quickly filled the 20 covers laid out for the evening, and sipped ‘Caña’, ‘Vermut’ and Negronis, nibbling at their girl dinners (skewered olives, cornichons, anchovies and pickled chilis). In that half, we witnessed the birth of a venue that will see more first dates than that French guy off the telly. Zula Rabikowska The second part of the evening encompassed the hours between 6pm and 11pm, which saw hundreds more people flock to the venue, filling not only La Camionera and Off Broadway upstairs, but spilling out onto the street. Downstairs became close, hot, sweaty and sexy, with the bar upstairs housing the overspill. The droves of lesbians and their exes then filled the full width of the street, including the pavements, down to Climpsons in one direction and El Ganso in the other. In all my time in London, I have never seen lesbians congregate like this. Making my way through the sea of sapphics in the street, the vibes were truly immaculate – which, given that they had come to a bar that most of them couldn’t physically enter, was quite remarkable. The joy of being together as a group was palpable, and, in asking them their thoughts on the evening, one statement came up again and again: “it’s sooooo needed”, “it’s just so needed”, “we need more things like this”, and other such variations on a theme. Zula Rabikowska To see the lesbian community so united and so numerous filled my little gay heart with joy and hope. Others were just delighted to see that they hadn’t dated every lesbian in London – and I’m sure the unfamiliar faces and untapped friendship groups brought similar joy and hope to the hopeless sapphic serial daters. La Camionera is located downstairs at 63 Broadway Market. This morning they announced that they will be opening Sunday to Thursday (but to bear with them for specifics). Official opening times will be shared soon via their Instagram. For more of Zula Rabikowska’s photography, follow her on Instagram or head over to her website. Escape the algorithm! Get The DropEmail address SIGN UP Get must-see stories direct to your inbox every weekday. Privacy policy Thank you. You have been subscribed Privacy policy Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MOREWhy do we think we can’t find love in the club?What to do (and not do) if you get caught cheatingEscentric MoleculesMolecule 01 + Champaca is Escentric Molecules’ latest sultry scentDoes the internet have mummy issues? Ej Dickson investigatesHalf His Age: Jennette McCurdy’s new novel takes on age-gap relationshipsOakley Breakdancer Sunny Choi is Super Bowl readyJim BeamJim Beam and Dazed are celebrating game day earlyBright futurism: Who’s in charge of imagining a better future for humanity?The women fighting for trans inclusion at Hampstead ponds Why are so many young people going ‘no contact’ with their parents?The year of the Fire Horse: What does it mean for you?Desa Potato Head: The hotel fighting Bali's sustainability crisis Escape the algorithm! Get The DropEmail address SIGN UP Get must-see stories direct to your inbox every weekday. Privacy policy Thank you. You have been subscribed Privacy policy