
Tucked into a railway arch on Stepney Bank in Newcastle's Ouseburn district, Billy Bootleggers is an American-style dive bar built around bourbon, live music and Prohibition-era Americana. It moved to the arches -- a space previously used as a microbrewery taproom -- from an earlier home beneath a bar on Nelson Street in the city centre. The bar stocks a wide range of bourbons, including its own brews, alongside cocktails, a Long Island iced tea menu and its signature apple-pie moonshine. Live .....
Housed in a Grade II* listed former locomotive works in the heart of Newcastle, the Boiler Shop is one of the most atmospheric music and arts venues in the north-east of England. The building dates to 1823 and formed part of Robert Stephenson and Company's pioneering locomotive factory, the first of its kind in the world, where engineering legends such as the Rocket were built. After decades of decline, it was restored and reopened as a cultural venue in 2017. The main space embraces its raw in.....

Cowgirls and Country is a country-and-western themed bar and party venue in Birmingham, on Broad Street in the heart of the city's nightlife district. Decked out with Nashville-style decor, it leans into a honky-tonk atmosphere of line dancing, country anthems, and dressing-up, and is a popular choice for birthdays, hen parties, and group celebrations. The venue combines a bar serving cocktails, beers, and spirits with a programme of themed nights, live entertainment, and DJ sets spanning count.....
Christened the Fabric of the North when it opened on Times Square in 2005, Digital is one of Newcastle's most iconic electronic music clubs and a long-standing fixture of the city's nightlife. Founded by club operator Aaron Mellor on the former Powerhouse site next to the Centre for Life, it quickly established itself as a hub for dance and electronic music, drawing clubbers from across the region with an eclectic line-up that mixed international DJs with local talent. It has played a pivotal ro.....

Laid out on Newcastle's Town Moor and named after the great exhibitions once held on its grounds, Exhibition Park is a fifteen-hectare green space on the northern edge of the city centre. Its origins lie in the Town Moor Improvement Act of 1870, and it took its present name from the Royal Jubilee Exhibition of 1887, which drew some two million visitors to the site. The park hosted an even larger event in 1929, the North East Coast Exhibition, attended by several million people, of which the art.....

On Newcastle's elegant Grey Street, directly opposite the Theatre Royal, Harry's Bar is a stylish bar and brasserie in the heart of the city. Open from breakfast until late, it blends a relaxed all-day restaurant with a lively evening bar, serving an eclectic, broadly American-influenced menu alongside a strong drinks list. Its setting on one of Britain's most admired streets gives it a prominent place in Newcastle's Grainger Town. The kitchen runs an imaginative offer that covers lunch, pre-th.....

Opened two days before Christmas in 1873, Leazes Park was the first purpose-built public park on Tyneside, created after nearly three thousand working men petitioned the council for open ground for the purpose of health and recreation. Laid out to the west of the city centre, it took sixteen years from petition to completion. Centred on an ornamental boating lake above the course of the Lort Burn, the Grade II-listed Victorian park was designed in the style of its era, with a bandstand added in.....

Tucked away in Newcastle's creative Ouseburn Valley, Little Buildings is a tiny grassroots music venue and rehearsal space that punches far above its size. Holding only around sixty people, the fully licensed room has earned a reputation as a vital first rung on the ladder for the region's emerging bands. The venue began life as a humble rehearsal space and grew its reputation through do-it-yourself, bring-your-own-bottle gigs before being taken over by its current owners in 2017, who added a s.....
The fortress that gave Newcastle upon Tyne its name survives today as Newcastle Castle, a pair of medieval buildings standing above the river in the heart of the city. A new castle was first raised on the site in 1080 by Robert Curthose, the eldest son of William the Conqueror, on his return from a campaign in Scotland, replacing earlier Roman and Anglo-Saxon occupation of this strategic crossing point of the Tyne, and it was from this stronghold that the growing town took its name. The stone ke.....
Beneath the students' union building on Newcastle University's city-centre campus sits Venue, a basement entertainment space that doubles as one of the city's busiest live-music rooms. Run by Newcastle University Students' Union (NUSU) on Kings Walk, it switches between student-union functions and public gigs, club nights and events, often within the same week. The main space is a flexible, multi-room arena with an elevated stage, a 360-degree bar and high-tech sliding dividers that let it scal.....