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    St James & Emmanuel

    4.5 (2 reviews)
    Closed Closed

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    17 years ago

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    The Gay Centre - Located to the rear of the the 8th Day Cafe and directly opposite the entrance to MMU Students Union just past the Flyover,

    The Gay Centre

    4.5(2 reviews)
    3.6 miOxford Road Corridor

    The place informally known as 'The Gay Centre' should not be confused with the LGF in the City…read moreCentre. The 'Gay Centre' has loads of different groups, for young men, young women, trans people, older lesbians, disabled LGBT people and many more. The centre has offices, leaflets, organised social/support meetings, and has it's own full kitchen. If you want something 'gay' to do without heading down Canal Street, try your luck here. You're best off having a look online for what groups run at what times, and contact details should be available online or you can message me and I'll get back to you with relevant contact details.

    The Gay Centre is a very welcoming space which has a very community feel to it. There's a…read morecafe/kitchen area and also rooms available for local LGBT community groups to use for meetings and events. Most of the groups that meet here tend to be aimed at specific groups such as young people, transgender people, older people and women however recently lots more projects and social events (open to everyone) have made the centre their home as an alternative to canal street and the gay village such as the monthly Queer Cafe, KaffeeQueeria and a number of arts/media and cultural projects. You can also get copies of most free community gay magazines here such as OutNorthWest (if the centre door is open call in) as well as information about other groups and services from the huge leaflet rack. Free Condoms and Lube are also available from the centre.

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    The Gay Centre - Main Entrance to the Gay Centre - look for purpe door the sign 49-51 Sidney Street

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    Main Entrance to the Gay Centre - look for purpe door the sign 49-51 Sidney Street

    Friends of Hough End Hall

    Friends of Hough End Hall

    4.0(1 review)
    1.8 miChorlton

    My Mum and Dad had their engagement party at Hough End Hall back in 1981 (the night ended with my…read moreMum getting drunk and dropping my Dad's meat pie supper outside the chippy on the way home - quite frankly, on the strength of that anecdote, I'm surprised that I'm even alive) so it's quite nice to see that the old place has been spruced up and reopened to the public after being closed for a number of years. Hough End Hall is a really beautiful old building, with a rather long and illustrious history behind it. It was built in 1596 during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I by Sir Nicholas Mosley (ca. 1527-1612), when he became Lord of the Manor of Manchester and of the dependent Manor of Withington. The Mosleys were an influential Mancunian family from the 16th century onwards, and prominent in the affairs of the Manchester district for two and a half centuries. (Anthony Mosley of Manchester and his brother Nicholas in London were wealthy drapers.) At the time Manchester was incorporated as a borough (1838) the manorial and market rights were still the property of the Mosleys (in 1845 Sir Oswald sold these to the corporation). Mosley Street in Manchester is named after them, and yes - you are thinking correctly - they did produce 'that' Oswald Mosley. But enough of the history lesson, what's it actually like inside now it's been reopened to the public? Well, it certainly looks a lot more modern - the main bar area is filled with brand new leather sofas and in some places, you can still smell the paint. However, to me, the ambience felt like that you'd get in a 1980s style bar. The range of wine and beer wasn't that great, and I can't help but laugh at the thought that any bar thinks that someone would realistically pay £45 for a bottle of bog standard Smirnoff vodka. But still. I've yet to dine there, so perhaps I should reserve judgement until I've actually had a meal in their restaurant which is promising great culinary things for the people of South Manchester and beyond. Perhaps the venue just needs to settle down a bit and create an atmosphere which is distinctly 'different' and unique to everything else currently being offered. I look forward to paying it a second visit in the near future and seeing if the new owners of this wonderful building will really do justice to its magnificent history.

    St James & Emmanuel - communitycenters - Updated June 2026

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