Nightclub

How to Get to Bauhaus from The D

Bauhaus is 0.2 mi from The D. Free guest list available.

Downtown's Premier Techno & House Music Destination

Distance

0.2 mi

Cover

FREE

with NoCoverVegas

Ride

Rideshare

Hours

Fri–Sat, 10 PM – 5 AM

Transportation

Getting from The D to Bauhaus

Here are your options for getting from The D to Bauhaus.

Rideshare (Uber / Lyft)

5-15 minutes$10-25 (surge pricing late night)

Request a ride from The D’s designated rideshare pickup area. Most Strip-to-venue rides take 5-15 minutes depending on traffic. Use the hotel’s rideshare zone to avoid waiting in the taxi line.

Taxi

5-15 minutes$15-30

Taxis are available at the The D taxi stand. The ride to Bauhaus is straightforward. Note that taxis in Vegas cannot be hailed on the street — you must use a hotel taxi line.

Venue Overview

What to Expect at Bauhaus

Bauhaus Las Vegas opened in October 2025 at 115 North 7th Street in downtown's arts district, bringing the underground music philosophy of Houston's Bauhaus — one of the most respected electronic clubs in the American South — to a city better known for mega-club spectacle than for dedicated genre programming. The Las Vegas location occupies the building that previously housed Place on 7th, a multi-purpose events space, and was deliberately built outside the Strip casino resort corridor: no hotel integration, no casino floor routing traffic toward the entrance, no resort fee applied invisibly to drink prices. Bauhaus exists as a pure nightclub in a neighborhood of art galleries, independent bars, and working creative studios — a geography that shapes who shows up and why. The single defining characteristic that separates Bauhaus from every other nightclub in Las Vegas is genre exclusivity. Every Strip nightclub that programs electronic music also programs hip-hop, Top 40, or open format on rotating nights to capture the broadest possible demographic — Hakkasan and OMNIA alternate between EDM headliners and R&B nights, XS and Encore Beach Club balance electronic with hip-hop bookings, and Zouk's stage hosts a genre range wide enough to include rap concerts. Bauhaus does not. Techno, house, and tech house are the beginning and end of the programming brief, and no booking deviates from that range regardless of the potential attendance upside from a crossover act. The practical result is a crowd that self-selects around the music rather than the social experience — guests who arrive at Bauhaus on a Friday have come specifically for the music, producing a floor dynamic categorically different from the spectacle-and-bottle-service culture of production mega-clubs. The Danley sound system is Bauhaus's primary physical investment. Danley installs their speaker systems in professional concert venues and audiophile listening rooms, and the Bauhaus installation treats the 400-person room with the same acoustic engineering standards. When a resident DJ pushes a deep house set at 1 AM, the Danley system renders every drum transient, sub-bass frequency, and synthesizer harmonic with clarity that conventionally installed nightclub speaker arrays cannot achieve at comparable volume levels. The 60-foot LED wall serves as the venue's only major visual element — it responds to the DJ's output rather than running branded content loops — and its scale relative to the 400-person room creates an immersive visual context without the multi-screen production rigs that Vegas mega-clubs install to justify large visual budgets. After-hours programming defines Bauhaus's scheduling position within Las Vegas nightlife. Opening at 10 PM on Friday and Saturday and closing at 5 AM — one hour past the closing time of every major Strip nightclub and most downtown venues — Bauhaus operates in a time slot that exists separately from mainstream club culture. The peak energy window runs from 3 AM to 4:30 AM, the hours after Hakkasan, XS, and the Fremont East venues have pushed their last guests toward the exits. Las Vegas service industry workers — bartenders, dealers, floor managers, and performers finishing shifts at 2 AM — arrive to mix with underground electronic music travelers who specifically plan around the Bauhaus format and EDC Las Vegas attendees who use the 7th Street venue as an after-hours extension of festival weekend programming. The venue sits 4 miles from the Las Vegas Convention Center, making it a practical next stop for festival crowds when Convention Center grounds close. The all-black dress code operates as cultural shorthand rather than door enforcement. Unlike Strip club dress codes where doorstaff turn guests away for specific violations, the Bauhaus preference for all-black clothing functions as a self-identification signal: guests who arrive in black have already demonstrated awareness of the venue's culture, which produces a more cohesive room energy than a general-admission format that welcomes any demographic equally. Street parking on surrounding 7th Street blocks is available on operating nights without charge, making Bauhaus the only major Las Vegas nightclub where most guests arrive by car rather than rideshare — a practical advantage that the downtown arts district provides by default, in contrast to Strip venues where valet queues and garage fees add friction to every arrival.

Hours

Fri–Sat, 10 PM – 5 AM

Dress Code

All black preferred. Creative nightlife attire welcome. No athletic wear.

Music

Techno, House, Tech House

Cover Charge

FREE with NoCoverVegas

Highlights

Danley sound system60-foot LED wallDedicated techno/house venueOpen until 5 AMBrand new (opened Oct 2025)

The D to Bauhaus— FAQ

How do I get from The D to Bauhaus?

Bauhaus is 0.2 mi from The D. Take an Uber, Lyft, or taxi from the hotel’s designated pickup area. The trip is quick and straightforward.

Is there free entry to Bauhaus from The D?

Yes. Sign up for the NoCoverVegas guest list and get free entry to Bauhaus. This saves you $20-30 cover per person. Women are free on guest list all night. Men are free before the cutoff time with an even gender ratio.

What should I wear to Bauhaus?

Bauhaus dress code: All black preferred. Creative nightlife attire welcome. No athletic wear. Plan your outfit before leaving The D to avoid being turned away at the door.

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