
Run as a collective by its own membership, the 1 in 12 Club in Bradford is one of Britain's longest-surviving self-managed social centres, organised on anarchist principles of self-management, co-operation and mutual aid. It was formed in 1981 by members of the city's Claimants Union, which took its name from a government figure stating that one in twelve benefit claimants was defrauding the state, and it spent its early years as a nomadic club staging gigs and meetings in the upstairs rooms of .....

A triumph of restoration in the centre of Bradford, Bradford Live occupies the former Odeon cinema on Godwin Street, a much-loved building that was saved from demolition after a long public campaign. Originally opened in 1930 as the New Victoria, the grand art deco hall once welcomed stars from the Beatles to the Rolling Stones before falling silent for more than two decades. Following a restoration costing in excess of fifty million pounds, it reopened in 2025 as a flagship live-entertainment v.....
Opened in July 2025 to replace two of Bradford's long-standing markets, Darley Street Market is a purpose-built, three-storey market hall with an outdoor courtyard in the heart of the city centre. Conceived as a state-of-the-art venue catering for shopping, socialising and cultural activity, it brought the traders of the former Kirkgate and Oastler markets together under one modern roof. The scheme had been in development since 2018 as part of a wider effort to revitalise Bradford's core shoppin.....
Billing itself as the number-one venue for rock and alternative music in Bradford, Nightrain is a live music venue and rock bar in the heart of the West Yorkshire city. Opened in May 2019 on Queensgate, just a few minutes' walk from the city's main railway stations, it has quickly developed a reputation for top-quality nights, showcasing grassroots performers, leading tribute bands and world-touring artists in a friendly, music-focused environment. The venue caters specifically to fans of rock,.....

Opened in 2016 with the stated aim of bringing live music back to the city, The Underground has become a fixture of Bradford's grassroots and touring gig scene. It occupies a Duke Street building in the city centre that had previously been a venue known as the Gasworks, and its founders set out to fill a gap for rooms of the right size to host rock and metal gigs. Now run as a multi-genre venue with a capacity of around 350, it programmes events most weekends, ranging from rock, metal and punk.....