There are bars, and then there are cathedrals. Pulse was a cathedral. For the people who danced there, who came out on its floor, who found their first chosen family inside its walls, Pulse was never just a nightclub. And what happened there on June 12, 2016 changed Orlando — and the global LGBTQ+ community — forever.
Writing about Pulse is delicate work. We’re doing it because the story matters, because every gay bar in Orlando exists in the shadow and the light of that night, and because honoring the 49 lives lost is not a one-day practice. It’s a commitment.
What Happened at Pulse
On the night of June 11, 2016, Pulse — a beloved LGBTQ+ nightclub in Orlando — was hosting its regular Saturday Latin Night. In the early hours of June 12, a gunman entered the club and opened fire. Forty-nine people were killed. Dozens more were injured. The victims were overwhelmingly young, Latino, and queer. Many were there with partners, with friends, with family — in a room that was supposed to be one of the safest in the city.
At the time, Pulse was the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history and the deadliest attack on LGBTQ+ people in the country’s history. Orlando’s queer community — and the entire city — was shattered.
The Response: An Entire City Rose Up
What happened next is part of why Orlando is the city it is today. In the hours and days after the shooting, thousands of people lined up to donate blood. Local businesses opened their doors. Restaurants delivered food to first responders and grieving families. Vigils filled Lake Eola Park. Spanish-speaking interpreters volunteered at hospitals to help Latino families navigate unimaginable grief.
Organizations like the LGBT+ Center Orlando, Zebra Youth, Equality Florida, and One Orlando Alliance coordinated resources. Straight Orlando showed up for queer Orlando. And queer Orlando — still raw, still mourning — showed up for each other. The phrase “Orlando Strong” wasn’t a slogan. It was a practice.
The 49: Saying Their Names
Any piece of writing about Pulse has a responsibility to remember that this was not an abstract tragedy. It was 49 specific human beings — sons, daughters, partners, siblings, dancers, nurses, students, parents. News archives and community organizations continue to maintain tributes to each of the 49. If you’ve never read their stories, take an hour. They deserve to be known.
The Memorial: A Difficult, Ongoing Journey
For years after the shooting, the original Pulse building stood at 1912 South Orange Avenue as an informal gathering place. The community came there to grieve, to remember, to leave flowers and flags and letters. A nonprofit called the onePULSE Foundation was formed to create a permanent memorial and museum, and raised more than $20 million in pledges and donations. For reasons that have since been thoroughly reported on by Orlando journalists, that effort collapsed, and the foundation officially dissolved at the end of 2023.
In 2024, the City of Orlando stepped in to lead the memorial process. The city has committed $7.5 million in funding, with another $5 million from Orange County, and has worked through a public design process with survivors, families, and the broader community. In March 2026, the Pulse nightclub sign was respectfully removed from the site and the building itself was demolished — a painful but necessary step before construction of the permanent memorial. The permanent memorial is currently scheduled to be completed in September 2027.
The process has not been smooth. Survivors and families have sometimes disagreed about what the right tribute should look like. Money has been mismanaged. Trust has had to be rebuilt. All of that is part of the story. Grief, especially collective grief, is not a straight line.
Also in 2026, as Florida passed legislation with broad impacts on LGBTQ+ protections at the local level, specific amendments were included to preserve the Pulse Memorial and protect Pride festivals from being shut down. Imperfect as the surrounding law is, the preservation of Pulse as a protected site reflects just how deeply this place matters — to Orlando, to Florida, and to the broader LGBTQ+ movement.
Why Gay Bars Still Matter — Maybe More Than Ever
It would have been understandable if Orlando’s LGBTQ+ community had retreated from nightlife after Pulse. Some survivors did, for a time. But what actually happened is the opposite: the community re-invested in queer spaces. Because gay bars have always been more than bars. They are classrooms. They are protest sites. They are where drag performers raise money for HIV care and where young queer kids see their first true reflection of themselves.
Every gay bar in Orlando today — including ours — operates in conversation with Pulse. The resilience isn’t performative. It’s built into the floor. It’s in the DJs who remember the names. It’s in the drag queens who close their sets with tributes. It’s in the bartenders who carry a little extra care in the late hours of a Saturday night.
How to Honor Pulse
If you’re wondering how to meaningfully remember Pulse, here are a few ways Orlando’s LGBTQ+ community has embraced:
- Visit the memorial site. Even as the permanent memorial is under construction, the site at 1912 South Orange Avenue remains a place of remembrance. Go respectfully. Read the names. Bring flowers or a small token if you’re moved to.
- Learn about the 49. Don’t let them become a number. They were individuals.
- Support Latino LGBTQ+ organizations. The victims were overwhelmingly Latino. Orgs like Misión Boricua and QLatinx continue that work.
- Show up for Latin Night. Pulse’s Latin Night was not just a theme. It was a family. Honor that by showing up to the Latin LGBTQ+ nights that continue across Orlando today.
- Vote and advocate. The policy conditions that shape queer safety in Florida are set at the ballot box and in Tallahassee. Be there.
Live Loud, Love Proud
At Anthem Orlando, our motto — Live Loud, Love Proud — was chosen with intention. It’s what Pulse taught this city. That queer joy is not a luxury. That dancing is resistance. That we honor the people we’ve lost by living fully and visibly.
Every night we open our doors at 100 North Orange Avenue, we carry that forward. You’re welcome here.
Anthem Orlando — in memory of the 49. In community with the living. Forever proud of who we are.
