Gay spa boston

Authentic Banya Sauna in Boston

Kelo Banya Sauna is built from very special kelo timber logs
carefully selected and imported from Lapland, Finland.

General Admission

Online Reservation. 3 Hours.
Robe & towel service, access to Kelo sauna, steam room, chilly plunge and Kelo lounge.

Walk-ins without reservation are welcome at $79/person and execute not guarantee availability*.

Private Reservation

Enjoy a private 3 hour reservation at Kelo. Appreciate Authentic Banya, Steam Room, Cold Plunge, Juice Exclude and Lounge Area.

Party of up to 8 people. Additional guests are welcome at $/person.
Maximum capacity of 24 per go to.

Additional Services

Scrub Service

~15min
Exfoliates the skin, removes dead cells and promotes a refreshed and smoother complexion.

Signature Platza

~15min/~10min
Book your individual Platza treatment with our sauna specialist.

*Salt & Honey Glazing

~min
Exfoliate with salt and hydrate with organic honey for a healthy skin glow.

Foam Wash

~15min
Luxurious, gentle cleansing with chemical-free soap foam and b

Gay Boston &#; the finest gay hotels, bars, clubs &#; more

Revolution was born in Boston. The capital city of Massachusetts is the largest city in New England and the place where the seeds of the American Revolution were first sown.

This loaded history is one of the city’s main selling points, and tourists reach from all over to visit iconic sites enjoy the Boston Massacre site, where tensions with British soldiers erupted in ; the Old South Encounter House, inside which the infamous Boston Tea Party took place; and the famous Freedom Trail, where you can trace the steps of patriots fond Paul Revere, whose midnight ride warned of British advances. In short, Boston is a living museum of America’s fight for independence, ripe for exploration.

Boston’s revolutionary momentum has continued into the present, making it a trailblazing capital with a reputation for doing its own thing. Boston was home to the first public park in the U.S., the first subway, the first public school, and the first openly gay elected state official in the country—not to mention Harvard, America’s oldest and most pres

BosGuy reviews bliss Spa Boston

The winter months in Boston can be tough &#; even for natives enjoy me. In years past I&#;ve posted tips on How to survive a Boston winter, but this year I thought I&#;d recommend some ways you can pamper yourself.  To that close I&#;m going to review different spas in Boston to try and recognize my favorite.

I started my &#;research&#; at the full service spa, bliss Spa Boston on the second floor of the W Hotel Boston.  The spa is clean, spacious and very welcoming. Whimsical stenciling throughout the second floor greet you as you walk into the spa. My only knock against bliss Spa Boston is how tiny the men&#;s facilities are and the fact they only have one male masseur (his identify is Vincent BTW).

Vincent gave me what bliss calls a minute &#;blissage&#; their version of  a Swedish massage. When I met Vincent I asked if he would also incorporate some deep-tissue techniques in particular on my legs and back, which he obliged.  The massage also included a paraffin wax treatment on my feet that left them feeling friendly and softer than most of my ped

In the late s and ahead ‘80s, Paul M. would often fill himself with liquid courage before he slipped through the doors of Club LaGrange, a gay bathhouse that occupied a worn but majestic brownstone in a gritty slice of downtown Boston.

Up a flight of stairs, he’d approach the counter, supply his name and some cash, before proceeding to a room or locker, where he’d stow his clothes and don a towel. Then, for the overnight, he was anonymous and free to explore the showers, saunas and private rooms of the club—each space a new opportunity to cruise for sex.

“I was young, horny and in the closet,” says Paul, now 82 years old; the bathhouses—outside the gaze of the more universal gay bars—filled a need for him.

Boston never had a celebrated gay bathhouse scene like those in New York or San Francisco—partly due to a hangover of “Puritan prudishness” that augured a tamer scene overall, according to historians. Boston’s gay society, some of its own members admit, was not as “wild” or uninhibited as those in other large American cities. But for a period in the s and ’80s, a string of baths in