The Deaf Institute on Grosvenor Street is one of those Manchester venues that gets everything right without trying too hard. The building is a former institute for the deaf – hence the name – and the interior is all vintage wallpaper, chandeliers, and dark wood. It looks like someone’s eccentric grandma decorated a music venue and it absolutely works.
Upstairs is the gig room. Around 300 capacity, raised stage, good sightlines, and a sound system that punches well above its weight. The booking policy leans indie, alternative, and electronic but they’ll throw in hip hop, folk, and everything between. It’s a room where bands sound better than they should and crowds actually pay attention.
Downstairs is the bar and club space. Good beer selection, decent cocktails, and DJ nights that range from Northern Soul to disco to house. The ground floor also does food – brunch and lunch stuff that’s solid. Friday and Saturday nights the whole building comes alive with gigs upstairs feeding into the party downstairs. It’s a natural double-header of a night out. The Oxford Road corridor location means you’re surrounded by students, but the Deaf Institute pulls a mixed crowd. One of the best mid-size venues in the country.




