This is a good post, but you actually left out the most important part about gay clubs. It's not just about the neighborhood being safe. The club itself is a safe haven for LGBTQ+ people to be or discover who they are.
If anyone is interested about what gay clubs mean to us members of the community, read the quotes from the patrons of Pulse that fateful night.
Machine closing down is a big deal. Boston is a highly liberal, allegedly accepting city, yet gay life in Boston is practically nonexistent. There is no gay village. There are hardly any gay clubs (and now one fewer). There are hardly any gay bars. Boston has never been able to shake its puritanical roots. My friends from Toronto, Chicago, NYC, Montreal are all shocked how pathetic Boston's gay scene is, despite our billing as all accepting and "progressive."
It’s shocking how quickly the gay scene in Boston has been marginalized in the face of development, or maybe it shouldn’t be. The city of West Hollywood goes so far as to consider how new development impacts the local unique culture. Not surprisingly, the gay scene continues to expand in Weho rather than fight for its survival in the name of progress.