Islington Mill

Greg Thorpe

After closing its doors in 2017 to undergo an extensive redevelopment project, Islington Mill is back, and we couldn’t be happier. There aren’t many venues in Greater Manchester that feel so creatively alive as this place. Operating under a steadfast belief in the DIY maxim, Islington Mill is fiercely independent, supportive to artists of various disciplines, and creative in every respect.

A little on its history. When Islington Mill received Grade II listed status two decades ago, laid-back visionary Bill Campbell leased a single floor. The Mill was built for cotton spinning in 1823, but partially collapsed just a year after construction. Not only did it bounce back soon after, but the newly restored version (much of which stands today) is considered an exemplary piece of 19th Century mill architecture. This try-again spirit lingers in the continual re-imagining of the Mill: as gig venue, gallery, performance space, school, studio and residence.

The Mill’s first arts events and exhibitions took place in 1999, with Campbell acquiring freehold for the rest of the building two years later. Since then, the Mill has become an internationally recognised arts centre. The building and its host of itinerant creatives foster new and unexpected things from any given project, while music festivals like Sounds From The Other City and Fat Out Fest, which grew from the mill, follow models like no other among city festivals – nurtured, not sponsored, and curated from the ground up – a radical approach in the bleak world of Heineken-powered compounds.

James StreetSalfordM3 5HW View map
Telephone: 0161 278 6404 Visit Now

Admission Charges

Free

Services and Facilities

Artist studios, music, exhibition space, food and drink, accommodation

What's on near Islington Mill

Museum displays about the Miners’ Strike
City Centre
Strike! A guided gallery tour

Join a strike themed guided tour highlighting key strikes represented in the museum’s galleries, with a particular focus on objects relating to the 1984 to 1985 Miners’ Strike.

from £0.00

Where to go near Islington Mill

Caustic Coastal art gallery and studios, Salford
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Caustic Coastal

Caustic Coastal is a gallery, artist studios and independent art label based in Salford, working as a curatorial platform for artists.

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7 Spot Pottery

Part of Salford Makers, 7 Spot is a 360 square foot ceramics studio offering classes and workshops as well as studio space for members.

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Salford Makers

Salford Makers are a collective of artists, designers, educators and makers based at Islington Mill in Salford.

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Middlewood Locks

Middlewood Locks is a new 24 acre mixed use opportunity in an attractive waterside setting centred around 3 canal basins.

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GK Gallery

This Chapel Street gallery and tea room hosts 8-12 week long exhibitions giving emerging artists a chance to showcase their work.

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Old Pint Pot

This lively spot could be considered a jack of all trades – pub, restaurant, events space and live music venue.

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Hot Bed Press

Hot Bed Press, based at the Casket Works in Salford, is a not-for-profit printmakers’ studio, is now the largest open-access print workshop in the region.

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