Islington Mill has been doing its own thing in Salford for over two decades, operating as a working artist studio complex that also puts on some of the most interesting events in Greater Manchester. The building is a former cotton mill on James Street — rough around the edges in a way that’s genuine rather than well-chosen. Artists actually work here, which gives the whole place an energy that purpose-built venues can’t replicate.
The events programme leans experimental. Electronic music, noise, avant-garde, performance art, immersive installations — the kind of stuff that doesn’t have a natural home anywhere else in the region. If you want safe and predictable, this isn’t it. If you want to see something you’ve genuinely never seen before, Islington Mill delivers more consistently than anywhere in Manchester.
The venue spaces vary depending on the event. Sometimes it’s a single room with a sound system. Sometimes the whole building opens up and you’re wandering through studios and corridors discovering things. The unpredictability is part of the appeal.
It’s technically Salford, not Manchester, which means a short walk from the centre or a quick tram to Salford Central. The bar at events is basic and cheap. The crowd is committed — artists, musicians, people who seek out the edges of culture rather than waiting for it to come to them. Islington Mill matters. Check what’s on and go.