
Turn empty London office blocks into ‘late-night party zones', report suggests
With financial districts struggling to bounce back to full capacity post-Covid, and the nightlife industry facing an existential crisis, there are suggestions clubs could move into deserted office blocks at evenings and weekends.
In its annual eccentric report on the future of leisure, the creative studio Bompas and Parr says it envisions 'a future where financial districts in London and the world over are transformed into world-class late-night party zones'.
'By day, the city bustles with suits and stocks. By night, it's reborn as a pulsating rave arena,' the report says. 'With few residents to file noise complaints, organisers capitalise on the empty, echoing canyons of glass and steel.
'Empty office lobbies become sought-after DJ booths, rooftops host industry defining light shows, and any space that isn't locked morphs into a dancefloor to create a sprawling web of passionate chaos as capitalism and counterculture merge.'
It may sound far-fetched, but it could become reality as the corporate and hospitality industries respond to changing behaviour in a post-Covid world.
Michael Kill, the chief executive of the Night Time Industries Association (NTIA), said the prospect of few noise complaints and the need to boost footfall in areas that workers have deserted in the shift to work from home made it an appealing prospect.
'There are conversations going on about things like the City of London, where the financial district is, as there is a very limited residential core so without a doubt, given some of the noise complaints and restrictions, that actually makes sense and works for nightlife,' Kill said.
About 500,000 people work in the City of London but only 8,500 people live there, reducing the likelihood of noise complaints from residential properties, something that has proven a hindrance for venues in recent years.
Kill said some financial districts were struggling with the impact of having only 'three core days with full workforce', as many people were choosing to work from home on Mondays and Fridays.
'What we've always had with the financial districts is, after a Friday night, they close down and everyone disappears,' he said. 'But now we're seeing people only work from the office for about three days a week. Friday has become an extension of the weekend. So landlords are obviously looking for new opportunities, and that is a very constructive conversation we're having.'
He said there were conversations about how zoning rules could be adjusted to give 'preferential planning and licensing opportunities' to nightlife and hospitality businesses in financial areas.
Sign up to Headlines UK
Get the day's headlines and highlights emailed direct to you every morning
after newsletter promotion
The NTIA has warned the UK nightlife sector faces extinction by 2029 if venue closures persist. The number of nightclubs has more than halved between 2013 and 2024. The rate of decline was exacerbated by the pandemic, when clubs were shut for months on end and more than a third of the country's venues closed for good.
The industry was continuously adapting to entice people back to the dancefloor and ensure the sector's survival, Kill said, with everything from 'light clubbing to full-fat clubbing to hybrid spaces and the evolution of venues with multifaceted options like conference spacing'.
Bompas and Parr predicted that capitalising on the over-50s market would be key, and that the 'generation that pioneered sex, drugs, and rock'n'roll' would be seeking new ways to spend their spare time.
Kill said: 'What we've seen is the industry, in many respects, has been propped up by an older generation that are plugged into revisiting those club culture memories, rave memories, events memories. The reality is, all they want to do is go out and revisit their youth.
'So it's absolutely something that is happening and is a growing market that is without a doubt now being noticed by the sector as a whole as a big opportunity.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
22 minutes ago
- The Sun
Popeyes brings back viral fan favourite range after popular demand – but you have to be quick
POPEYES is bringing back its beloved Hot Honey range after it quickly became a fan favourite. The fast food restaurant revealed it sold over a quarter of a million of the 'swicy' sandwiches in just three months last year. After pulling the limited edition snacks from the menus, Popeyes social media inbox was inundated with requests for its return. In September last year, one disappointed customer took to social media and wrote: "Come back to the UK to find Popeyes stopped Hot Honey while I was away? Excuse me?" "Popeyes UK need to bring back that hot honey burger I'm so serious," another fumed. A third wrote: "Popeyes UK can you please explain why you have taken away the hot honey wings off your menu?! Do you realise this is a travesty?!?! Bring it back!!!" Well, Popeyes UK diners can breathe a sigh of relief as The Hot Honey Chicken Sandwich is now back for good. Bursting with 12-hour marinated and hand-breaded Shatter Crunchin' chicken breast, the burger is drizzled in the sweet and spicy sauce. It's topped with cheddar cheese, fresh pickles and nestled in a soft brioche bun. And that's not all. The signature sandwich will be joined by the Hot Honey Saucin' Boneless, Hot Honey Saucin' Wings and Hot Honey Box Meal. The sweet and fiery hot wings are lathered in Popeyes house-developed Hot Honey sauce that packs a punch. Available in 6, 8, or 12 wings - or as part of a meal, including fries and a drink - they are a must-try for fans looking to spice up their order. Fans of the flavour can also make it a meal and get even more chicken with the Hot Honey Box Meal. Hungry customers can enjoy the Hot Honey Chicken Sandwich, paired with a side of two Chicken Tenders, three Hot Wings or one-piece Signature Chicken, regular fries and a regular drink for just £11.29. Dave Hoskins, Head of Food at Popeyes UK said: 'Hot Honey is by far one of our best-selling flavours, as well as a viral trend that shows no signs of letting up. "Our sweet, fiery sandwich pairs sticky honey with our signature Shatter Crunch texture for a mouthwatering experience that fans have been begging us to bring back. Inside Popeye's first UK restaurant as we try the menu – and the fried chicken is better than KFC "We couldn't ignore the unprecedented calls from customers, and got right to work creating a bigger and better range filled with an explosion of the fiery stickin' sweet flavours, to satisfy that huge demand from our fried chicken cravers.' Hot Honey has been one of the biggest food trends this year and thousands of brands have jumped on the bandwagon. Even Jaffa Cakes have their own Hot Honey edition, which created division among fans. Supermarkets have been flogging own brand bottles of the amber nectar and Dominoes even launched a pepperoni pizza slathered in the stuff. Starbucks created a Hot Honey Cortado and culinary influencers have been sharing their own recipes online. "The rise of hot honey is far from random — it's the result of a complex and trackable convergence of cultural signals, consumer needs, and culinary experimentation," Alon Chen, the CEO and cofounder of Tastewise told Food & Wine. Hot Honey is the fusion of sweet honey and spicy chillies - but it's not as new as you'd think. Elijah Morey, co-owner of Elijah's Xtreme, told the magazine: "I saw Hot Honey become a real trend about four years ago. "It's a combination of Nashville hot honey chicken sandwiches and pizza places in New York City adopting Hot Honey, especially with Mike's Hot Honey once it really took hold of the market online." Another massive food trend this year has been the rise of Dubai Chocolate. The Dubai chocolate bar is milk chocolate with a gooey filling that consists of a thin, shredded pastry called Kunafa - a Dubai dessert - mixed with pistachio cream. It's taken off worldwide, but the original was first sold by the UAE-based FIX Dessert Chocolatier in 2022. The bars are hefty in weight and can also vary in flavourings as long as it contains Kunafa. 2025's biggest food trend: Hot Honey Hot honey is heating up the UK food scene—and it's not just a passing fad. This sweet-meets-spicy condiment has become a go-to for chefs, home cooks, and food influencers alike, turning everything from pizza to ice cream into a bold flavour experience. While the idea of mixing honey with chilli isn't new (versions have existed for centuries in parts of South America and Southern Europe), the modern hot honey trend took off in the US. It was popularised by Mike Kurtz, who launched 'Mike's Hot Honey' in Brooklyn in 2010 after discovering chilli-infused honey while living in Brazil. The UK caught on a few years later, with early adopters like London-based WilderBee introducing British-made versions of the fiery syrup around 2016. Since then, hot honey has gone from street food secret to supermarket staple. Big-name retailers like M&S and Aldi now stock their own versions, and it's increasingly common to see hot honey drizzled on fried chicken burgers, roasted veg, and even brunch dishes in trendy cafés. It's a hit across all food styles—comforting, inventive, and just adventurous enough for mainstream appeal.


BBC News
22 minutes ago
- BBC News
Council agree to sell former TK Maxx building in Peterborough
A council said it hoped a former TK Maxx building could be turned into a mixed residential and commercial City Council's cabinet members agreed to sell the Bridge Street building at a meeting on 15 July, as it was "no longer economically viable".It was bought by the local authority for £4.1m in 2020 with the aim of using it for a £15m community hub project known as The Vine.A feasibility commissioned by Tetra Tech in July 2022 said the cost of the necessary works was about £10.8m, making the project no longer viable. A marketing exercise to sell the vacant four-storey building will conclude in the Thulbourn, the council's cabinet member for growth and regeneration, told the meeting on 15 July, "62-68 Bridge Street is a prominent city centre site with development potential currently underutilised". Open to offers Adrian Chapman, the executive director of place and economy at the authority, said: "We should be proud of this site. At the moment it is difficult to be because the building is a slug of a building."I imagine it with something on there which is iconic in style and nature and is a real gateway into our city centre."He added: "This is a really significant site in our city centre and a site that deserves a building upon it which is of some significance, of quality and offers real value to the High Street."It's seen as part of our wider regeneration programme for the city centre."The building will go on the open market and the authority is open to all offers including development Local Democracy Reporting Service said before going out for informal tender the local authority had to pay for marketing fees (£15,000), a development brief (£10,000), surveys (£10,000) and legal fees (£5,000).Following the marketing of the building other costs would include, agent disposal fees (highest of 1.5% of sale price or £40,000), legal fees (highest of 1% of purchase price or £35,000) and a section 123 best consideration valuation – RICS Registered Valuer (£10,000).The council said it would achieve value for money by appointing professional advisers through a national local authority framework. Follow Peterborough news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.


Daily Mail
22 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
JoJo Siwa and boyfriend Chris Hughes look loved-up in LA as he states that he's 'really in love' with her
Chris Hughes and girlfriend JoJo Siwa show their blossoming romance is still going strong on their day out at a massage session in LA. After their day out on Monday, Chris admitted over the weekend that he's 'obsessed' with JoJo after meeting her in the UK's Celebrity Big Brother house in. The 32-year-old British TV presenter flew across the Atlantic to reunite with JoJo, 22, and they hugged and held hands outside The Now Massage parlor together where Chris said he's 'really in love' with JoJo, who he called his 'princess'. Adored: Chris stopped to express that he's 'in love' with his 'princess' JoJo Reality bites: The lovebirds met in the UK's Celebrity Big Brother house in April