XOYO
Famous for its rolling three-month residencies, XOYO turned a simple programming idea into one of London's most influential club formats after opening in Shoreditch in 2010. By handing a single artist a curated season of dates, it let DJs build immersive runs of nights and gave clubbers a reason to return week after week. The two-floor venue pairs a pulsing basement dancefloor with an upper level, creating distinct spaces under one roof. Its residency series has hosted a roll-call of leading n.....
Built in 1901 as a schoolmaster's residence beside a former Victorian school, the 1901 Arts Club is an intimate salon-style recital venue on Exton Street in Waterloo, a short walk from the station and the South Bank. The restored period house has been turned into a candle-lit chamber music room that seats only a few dozen guests, offering a deliberately small and personal alternative to London's larger concert halls. The performance space is built around its acoustics and atmosphere. A Steinway.....
Set within Shakespeare's Globe on Bankside, the venue at 21 New Globe Walk is home to Swan, a bar, restaurant and events space on the south bank of the Thames. Standing beside the reconstructed Globe Theatre, it looks across the river towards St Paul's Cathedral and the City, with a riverside terrace and large windows making the most of the view. The restaurant serves modern British food built around seasonal produce, alongside afternoon tea, weekend brunch and Sunday roasts, with a bar offeri.....

Set in a heritage-listed building dating from the early 1800s, 26 Curtain Road is a small listening bar in Shoreditch, in east London. Spread over two floors, it leans on the older, quieter side of the East London bar tradition -- somewhere to sit and talk rather than a full-on party venue -- with a listed fireplace and a skylight adding character to the room. Its defining feature is a vinyl-only music policy played through a high-fidelity hi-fi system with a rotary mixer and Celestion Ditton s.....
Perched on the roof of the Virgin Hotels London-Shoreditch, 45th & 7th is a rooftop restaurant and bar that borrows its name and mood from the crossroads of Manhattan, pairing a Mediterranean-leaning menu with panoramic views over east London. A semi-covered terrace wraps a swimming pool, and the indoor dining room opens onto the rooftop, giving the venue an open-air feel through the warmer months. The bar is part of 45 London, a members club and hospitality complex at 45 Curtain Road that also.....
Three interconnected Victorian railway arches spanning around 9,000 square feet make up 83 Rivington Street, a refurbished event space in the heart of Shoreditch, east London. The address occupies the site of the former Cargo, one of the area's best-known nightclubs, and retains a club-grade Martin Audio sound system and professional lighting inherited from that earlier life, now serving a blank-canvas venue used for brand launches, fashion shows, filming, live performance and pop-up dining. Th.....
93 Feet East is a bar, club, and live-music venue at 150 Brick Lane in Shoreditch, East London, set within the Old Truman Brewery in the heart of one of the capital's most fashionable districts. Established in 1999, the Grade II-listed venue has long been an institution on the East London scene and is noted for its high-quality Funktion-One sound systems. The venue comprises several distinct spaces, including a Live Room with a capacity of around 410, a main room holding roughly 375, a members'.....
ABBA Arena is a purpose-built concert venue in the Stratford district of east London, constructed specifically to host ABBA Voyage, a groundbreaking show in which the Swedish pop group appear as digital avatars, affectionately nicknamed ABBA-tars, performing alongside a live band. Opened in 2022, the demountable structure was designed to be the largest of its kind, seating several thousand spectators, and represents one of the most ambitious uses of motion-capture and projection technology in l.....
Founded in 1806 as the Sans Pareil, the Strand playhouse that became the Adelphi was the work of John Scott, a colour merchant who built it to showcase the talents of his daughter Jane, a prolific playwright and performer. By 1809 it held a licence for musical entertainments, pantomime and burletta, and in 1819 it took the name Adelphi from the riverside development designed by the Adam brothers nearby. Across the nineteenth century the theatre was rebuilt and enlarged more than once. The New A.....
A music bar and events space a few steps from Waterloo station, Alaska Waterloo occupies a unit on Alaska Street in the railway-arch district behind the South Bank. The room is built for hire and performance, with a compact stage, professional sound system, projector and colour-changing LED lighting, plus a fully stocked bar. The venue holds up to around 150 people standing, 90 seated theatre-style or 50 in a cabaret layout, making it suited to small and mid-sized events. It is used for parties.....