For the fans,
by the fans

XOYO

Drum n Bass, House, Techno
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.....

Aldwych Theatre

On the curving thoroughfare of the Aldwych, where the West End meets the legal quarter around the Strand, stands the Aldwych Theatre, a handsome Edwardian playhouse that has been a fixture of London theatreland for well over a century. It opened in 1905 as one of a matching pair of theatres built either side of the Waldorf Hotel, designed by the prolific theatre architect W.G.R. Sprague in a richly decorated style, with a horseshoe auditorium arranged over several tiers and seating in the region.....

Arsenal FC Football Match

Attending an Arsenal home match at the Emirates Stadium offers visitors the chance to experience top-flight English football amid one of the largest and most modern grounds in the country. Arsenal Football Club, founded in 1886 and one of the most successful and widely followed clubs in England, moved in 2006 from its historic Highbury ground to the purpose-built stadium in the Holloway area of north London, which holds around sixty thousand spectators across steep, enclosing tiers designed to k.....

Comedy Shows in London

London has long been one of the great centres of live comedy in the English-speaking world, and a night at one of its many comedy clubs and venues offers visitors a chance to sample a vibrant and distinctly British tradition of stand-up and cabaret. The city's comedy scene ranges from intimate basement rooms above pubs, where new acts hone their material in front of small crowds, to large purpose-built clubs and theatres that host established names and televised performers, with venues clustered.....

Dalston Superstore

A pioneering queer bar and club that helped reshape east London nightlife, Dalston Superstore has been a cornerstone of the city's LGBTQ+ scene since opening on Kingsland High Street in 2009. Part café-bar, part basement club, it set out to be an inclusive, around-the-clock space rather than a conventional gay venue, and quickly became a community hub. The ground floor operates as a relaxed bar and eatery by day, with art, food and drinks drawing a mixed crowd. Downstairs, the basement transf.....

Egg London

Founded by Laurence Malice, the impresario behind the trailblazing gay after-hours party Trade, Egg London opened in 2003 inside a converted Victorian warehouse in King's Cross. The name, a nod to the idea of rebirth, suited a venue that helped pioneer all-night clubbing in the capital thanks to a coveted 24-hour weekend licence. Spread across three levels, the club links a main room, middle floor and loft to a series of outdoor terraces, giving it an unusual indoor-outdoor flow. Its music pol.....

Emirates Stadium

Rising above the rooftops of the Holloway district in north London, the Emirates Stadium has been the home of Arsenal Football Club since 2006, when the club left its historic Highbury ground a short distance away in search of a larger capacity. Holding around sixty thousand spectators, the bowl-shaped arena was among the most ambitious stadium projects in English football at the time of its construction, designed with steeply raked, continuous tiers that keep the crowd close to the pitch and ge.....

Fabric

Since opening its doors in 1999 in a former cold store opposite Smithfield Market in Farringdon, Fabric has grown into one of the most respected nightclubs on the planet. The Charterhouse Street venue spreads across a labyrinth of three rooms, and built its name on serious sound, serious music and a no-frills devotion to the dancefloor. Its centrepiece is Room One, home to a celebrated bodysonic floor fitted with bass transducers that send the low end physically rumbling up through the dancers'.....

Inamo

Hawaiian/Pacific Rim
Inamo

Inamo at 134-136 Wardour Street is a pioneering Oriental fusion restaurant and bar in Soho. At the core of the concept is an interactive ordering system: diners place orders from an illustrated food and drinks menu projected onto the table surface, and can also set the mood lighting, explore the local neighbourhood and order a taxi home. The kitchen serves a menu of Pan-Asian dishes alongside cocktails and an extensive drinks list.

Itsu

Japanese
Itsu

Asian-inspired dishes freshly made across 83 UK restaurants - itsu has built its reputation on food that is steamed rather than fried, packed with wholegrains, fibre, protein, and greens. Noodles, brown rice, dumplings, soups, and sushi anchor a menu designed to make healthy eating genuinely appealing. The Draycott Avenue location is one of a network that extends the itsu philosophy: beautiful food that happens to be good for you.