A labour of love: Where to Go Manchester launches

Susie Stubbs

A new guidebook to Manchester city centre is now on sale – and it’s made for people like you.

Earlier this month, on behalf of the city’s rather enlightened retailers, we – commissioned by the Heart of Manchester BID – published a new, pocket-sized guidebook to Manchester. Its 104 pages recommend places to shop, eat, drink and stay. It uncovers the city’s arts, theatre and music scenes. It contains day, night and weekend itineraries. And alongside practical travel information, it also lists some of Manchester’s hidden and lesser-known attractions.

The idea behind the book is simple. It’s not intended to be the definitive guide to the city. Instead, this is an easy-to-dip-into little book, one that’s about discovering the Manchester you never knew. So within its stylish pages, you won’t just find a list of restaurants and bars. You’ll find recommended places to get brunch, say, or the highlights of Manchester’s cocktail and late night drinking scene. Between one-off shops and high-end boutiques, it points out some of the city’s curiosities, from lederhosen-wearing men to the world’s oldest angling club. In between Manchester’s myriad museums, galleries and historic libraries, it highlights where you can take the kids, or tells you to look up at some of the city’s high-rise architecture, old and new.

Home or away, this is the essential, insider’s guide to Manchester

Almost everything in the book has been specially commissioned, from Tom Cockram and Jan Chlebik’s photography to Modern Designers’ illustration and branding. It was written, designed and printed in Manchester, and it’s on sale now. You can buy it for just £4.95 at various stores, including online at Waterstone’s and Visit Manchester, and in person at Magma, Cornerhouse, Manchester Art Gallery and Piccadilly Garden’s Tourist Information Centre. It’s a handy guide to Manchester, whether you live here or are just visiting, but most of all it is a labour of love – and we do hope you like it.

Image by Jonathan Schofield.
Spotlight on

Walking Tours in Manchester by Jonathan Schofield

Presenting the best walking tours in Manchester for history buffs, culture enthusiasts, and those looking to scratch beneath the surface of the city.

Take me there

Culture Guides

Theatre in Manchester and the North
Theatre in the North

Eclectic as ever. You'll find inventive reworkings, world-class contemporary dance and Greater Manchester's inaugural Improv Festival in our guide.

Image by Jonathan Schofield.
Tours and Activities in the North

We've got many a good time in store this month as we round up the best walking tours, cultural classes and makers markets in the land.

portrait of Lorsung in a dark shirt with dark hair and dark round glasses
Literature Events in the North

We've got laughs and we've got leftfield on the live literature radar this month. Something for everyone, from poets playing with form to short story writers looking long.

Sextile
Music in the North

Open air clubs, new festivals and long-awaited gigs. The North West's live music scene is heating up this spring. 

Classical Music in the North

Read our latest highlights from the live classical music offer in Manchester and the North, taking in a number of the region's most cherished orchestral forces and venues.

Laura Ellen Bacon, Into Being, 2025. Photo © India Hobson, courtesy Yorkshire Sculpture Park
Exhibitions in the North

Willow weaving, textile collages, digital arts and ecology - all this and more in our exhibition top picks this month

Three men sit next to each other. One's head is bandaged, one holds a torch and one wears a sleepmask.
Cinema in the North

Live scores, midnight movies and the latest from Wes Anderson are just some of our upcoming film highlights.