Sun |
12:00 PM - 6:00 PM
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Mon |
11:00 AM - 8:00 PM
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Tue |
11:00 AM - 8:00 PM
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Wed |
11:00 AM - 8:00 PM
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Thu |
11:00 AM - 8:00 PM
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Fri |
11:00 AM - 8:00 PM
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Sat |
11:00 AM - 8:00 PM
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Enjoy your evening at Austin’s original swanky joint, the Speakeasy, featuring three levels of unique entertainment. The Music Lounge, with its roaring 20s vibe, is ready for you to listen to local Austin musicians live on a nightly basis. The Bowling Mezzanine offers a unique lounge setting with antique couches, a personalized bar, and two vintage bowling lanes overlooking the main music stage. The Ballroom has a 700-person capacity for events and a concert room for private parties. The Kabaret Room has a prohibition-era vibe with a pool table, stage, bar, and 1920s-inspired lounge furniture.
Join in on the fun at the best arcade bar in Austin, Cidercade, where they feature over 150 new and retro games from classics, pinball machine fighters to shooters, driving sports, and everything in-between. Refuel your energy and try one of the hard ciders or hard seltzers available at the bar. As soon as you grab your drink of choice, try the artisan thin-crust pizzas and wings made in a rotary stone hearth pizza oven. Perfect for birthday parties, family gatherings, and corporate events, they can help you set it all up and make your dreams come true.
Join Pollyanna as they invest in a world that values creativity and produces original theatre for young audiences that speaks to the needs, dreams, and imaginations of young people and the child that lives inside each of us. Enjoy your time at Pollyanna as they produce only original plays, commissioning playwrights from around the nation to create timely works for children that engage, motivate and inspire.
Explore the elegant side of Austin at the Neill-Cochran House, considered one of the city's three most important historic residences, where you'll discover several rooms decorated with 1780-1925 furniture. Tour the historic home and hear several stories about the many occupants over the years, including the Texas School for the Blind and its occupation by federal troops during Reconstruction. The home is open for daily tours and is a living history lesson on how Austin went from a sleepy outpost to the state capital to the home of one of the largest universities in the country.