Gay bathhouse san jose ca

San Jose Gay Saunas

Colours Oasis Resort

Colours Oasis Resort is a gay-friendly hotel located in the Pavas district. Just 20 minutes ride from Downtown San Jose, the location is to die for. On the high-end Westside, Embassy Area on the Boulevard, Colours is perfect base for exploring San José. The resort is equipped with a spa, pool and massage centre, and rooms offer modest luxury. With 23 rooms across two stories, you can predict a private bath in each room and access to a sun terrace and Jacuzzi. Colours is recognised by IGLTA as a gay-friendly destination and has a 35 year reputation for luxurious stays at great prices. The hotel has a unique affiliation with many other gay-owned businesses, particularly with other gay hotels in Costa Rica. For instance, Colours is a bastion of inspiration and back for many of the flourishing Costa Rica hotels and B&Bs that produce Costa Rica a trendy gay tourist destination. Reviewers mention the great nourishment and bar on-site, the wonderful staff and the amazing value for money.

O' Paradise Spa

Welcome to O' Paradise Spa

                              Notice: Service Fees increased effectively on Feb 8,

Learn more about us and what we offer by checking out our services list, and meet the team on our staff profile page. All of O'Paradise staffs were fully vaccinated.

Book an appointment for any of our services online any time - day or night! If you need to become in touch during business hours, check contact details. Physical gift card can be purchase in-store when you visited our spa. Thank you and keep healthy! 

Note: Memberships and all forms of gift cards including e-gift were NON-Refundable and had no cash value. Thank you

Note: For online appointments, our staffs will contact you by phone to re-confirm your appointment for service and time slot that you booked. Due to business flow and not require of holding your credit card info during online appointment, we Reserve Our Right to cancel your appointment if we can't contact you by your phone nu

This place is a huge riddle. The weirdest place. Not that it ain&#;t super pretty. It is very gentle , clean, spacious. Very American indeed. Issue is &#; it&#;s not exactly what you would look forward to of a lgbtq+ sauna. If you are european, you are going to be surprised with many aspects of this place. To launch &#; no alcohol aloud! Meaning you cannot enjoy the beautiful pool while sipping a cocktail. Bummer.

Secondly, there are no booths. There are rooms. All rooms costs capital to accommodate. These rooms have purify lenings and all. Its like hotel rooms. But whats the point in renting your control room? The whole thing is existence able to trek around and just spontaneously get into one of the rooms with someone you desire&#;


The most shocking thing is &#; sex is not permitted  in public spaces&#; And those spaces are not that sexy anyway&#; The relaxation area is designed like a school library. There is even a room with news channels showing all over&#;

In general there is a instinct of &#;over security&#; which darkens the atmosphere even more. You are given two sets of keys- one for a locker

San Jose&#;s Watergarden Survived Homophobia, Political Shifts, AIDS—But Not Coronavirus

John Gamber made his way to the Watergarden as a seasonal worker, hardly expecting the bathhouse to become an inextricable part of his life’s work.

It was , a year after the San Jose resort’s founding by investors John Snell, Jay Rubenstein, Alex Mendizabel and Bob Farrar and entrepreneur Sal Accardi—who made Watergarden known as a place where men could meet and approach on to other men free of intimidation. It was nine summers after the Stonewall riots ignited a global gay liberation movement.

It was also the year San Francisco’s Pride parade drew a staggering , attendees and an appearance by newly elected Supervisor Harvey Milk, who delivered a version of his known “Hope Speech,” urging his “gay brothers and sisters” to “come out,” to live authentically and to “tell the truths about gays.”

“I remember hearing those words and thinking how the planet seemed so full of possibility,” Gamber recalls, “and how we were making these communities for ourselves in places like the Watergarden, which rea