Fabric London

Some cunt will turn it in to flats and make a fortune.

Yeah, I bet. I’m hoping something like this with “out” some of the political corruption that takes place in our local councils.

Lets hope Fabric appeal.

Shit decision by shit people with shit for brains who dont give a shit about anything apart from their own shit agenda. Which is total shit.

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#shit

I know where the authorities are coming from, but I think it’s an Own Goal. When dance music was only played in night clubs, you could keep it contained. Alright, it is wack music, there is no denying that, but in a night club, when ur mashed on MDMA, it’s relatively harmless. What they’ve done now, is driven it onto the streets. I’ve seen it myself, people driving around, listening to their mix tapes, pretending they can tell the difference between one DJ and Another. It’s disgusting.

Hopefully this decision gets overturned, but I don’t hold out much hope.

Let’s face it, proper raves should be illegal and outdoors.

Therefore this can only be a good thing.

MOD EDIT :

Don’t “link” YouTube videos, JBoy. Lovely to see you back.

Confirmed apparently. Its being sold to property developers.

Can’t say I personally was too keen on Fabric as it cost a fortune and the staff there were utter wankers in my experience, but its certainly been a staple of London nightlife and I can imagine it’s a disappointment for a lot of people.

I was gutted when the London Soccer Dome was closed to be turned into flats so whilst this particular closure is no skin off my nose I do sympathise.

And how many of them were regulars? I suspect most went once or twice and had a good time while wankerd…just the usual jump on the band wagon and sign a petition for a “cool” clause

#nightclubs matter…?

always thought it overrated myself.

Rozzers close the Discotheque…and? One closes, one opens, young get fuelled up and fleeced… thems ever the ways. If its been open for 12 years, must be fricken stale/passed its shelf life by now anyway… would soon be the next Stringfellows :lou_is_a_flirt:

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A friend of mine once had a business meeting with Peter Stringfellow - he said it’s the only time he’s sat at a boardroom table that has a dancing pole in the middle of it, while the meeting was led by a bloke sat on his own throne.

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Assuming not the metaphore for

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Unfortunately you’re just showing yourself to be way out of touch. You’re talking about a club that’s as culturally significant as the National Gallery is to art. If it was just a normal club that fleeced youngsters do you really think it would be that big a story?

I suggest you read up about the ‘discotheque’ before talking such utter bollocks about it.

It was an incredibly popular club still, 17 years after opening, and in that time has had just under 7 million visitors, so not surprised.

Oh dear…someone is feeling a bit too grouchy to take these things with a bit of humour with which they were intended… but seriously, its a club,… ‘culturally significant as the national gallery is to art’? Now you are defo spouting complete bollocks :lou_lol:

Was the same when The Hacienda shut which was IMHO defo more culturally significant… but the legacy is what matters and defines its true cultural status, not the building or where it happened.

(PS…I do know about it Cherts, but still find the level of condemation about its closure a bit pathetic and concerning that the level of vexation seems greater than building a fucking wall in Calais to keep dark skinned people out… just saying like )

Make no mistake: if Fabric was a cocaine-plagued members club for the wealthy, it never would have been shut down

It’s finally happened: the last great stalwart of British clubbing has been eliminated. Fabric – one of the most established, reputable and well-organised nightclubs in Britain – has been permanently closed after numerous attempts from Islington Council and the police finally came good. It’s a decision that has baffled and outraged many. Anyone who has actually attended Fabric – and there’s a lot of us, 6 million in fact – knows that the care, time and energy put into ensuring the safety of the guests is incomparable to pretty much every other nightclub in the UK. It begs the question: if we can’t party at Fabric, where can we?

When people call Fabric a superclub it’s not merely a reference to the millions of people that attend each year. Fabric employed around 250 people. It was an iconic venue, occupying the same space as the Berghain in Berlin. It had international acclaim; it made people flock to London, and enhanced Britain’s reputation as a leader of this now-global clubbing industry that is worth billions of pounds, and which snaffles most top spots in the charts (NB Fabric cannot be held responsible for Pitbull).

It’s no surprise that even a 92-year-old Polish couple made a beeline for it. Like Cadbury’s or a local football team, the Fabric name held a place in many British hearts – it was a British institution that, between its record label and diverse range of clubnights, provided a one-of-a-kind, often formative experience for a huge portfolio of young people across the UK and abroad. While independent London clubs were being snuffed out for luxury flats, Fabric was an example of how it could be done.

But then, of course, there were the drugs. Looking through my photos from Fabric this morning, reliving some nostalgia to work through the outrage, I came across an old photo from 2006 - admittedly the last time I attended. In the photo, someone is wearing a D.A.R.E T-shirt – tees that were put out by a US charity that encouraged young people to “dare to resist drugs and violence”. Clubbers wore it as a piss-take but it’s a reminder of just how long moral panic around drugs has dogged dance music and underground culture.

But drugs don’t only exist within dance clubs, and you have to ask yourself why your average yuppie members club servicing coked-up blokes doesn’t enjoy the same kind of constant pursuit. Fabric even had its own in-house medical team, a team that had won praise from doctors, for being there where punters needed it. Then there’s the sad irony that documents have been released suggesting the cash-strapped council looking to sell its properties “fabricated” drug issues at Fabric. What a time to be alive.

But it’s just a nightclub! Who cares, right? Yet for many of us, the death of Fabric is a grave symbol, the last nail in the coffin of London nightlife, and another blow to British arts and culture as a whole – because remember, club culture is culture, proper culture that will be in history books, joining Warhol’s Studio 54 and Manchester’s Hacienda. Perhaps worse is the skin-crawling feeling that had Fabric been a playground for the rich and/or middle-aged, it would have shirked the long arm of the law.

So now what? There are genuinely barely a handful of places a young person, or an averagely paid person, can let loose in our nation’s capital city these days. The government’s hand at slowly turning London into a stale Switzerland-style playground for the rich has been effective. That’s not to say that Fabric was cheap – in fact, at £8 a drink (if you’re lucky) in Zone 1 London, whatever the downsides of ecstasy or sharing a gram of MDMA, it was certainly a cost-effective night out if you chose to indulge. Raving isn’t a right, but when freedoms and happiness are so closely bound to wealth it has to be questioned. And it won’t just be London – I hope the organisers of Warehouse Project are sleeping with one eye open.

Some good news: already motions to appeal the heinous decisions are in swing, and with the mayor pledging to help keep kids dancing, the battle might not be lost. Let’s hope the dancing is allowed to go on; the council might be richer without it, but London will be culturally so much poorer.

But it’s not just about Fabric, it’s about what it means. It means that any club in the country can now be closed down on a whim. It’s the demonisation of the clubbing culture. And it’s closing down the most popular and important club this country has.

Fabric is not just a club. It’s a creator of talent (see their outreach programs). It’s an educator. But most of all, it’s the only excellent club this country has. Yes MOS is fine, as is the Egg, Warehouse Project, XOYO etc. But they’re not Fabric.

This isn’t the fucking White House closing down. It’s the British equivalent of Space in Ibiza (which is also fucking closing - this is a really bad year for me personally).

Chersts, this action is nothing new… license removal has always been at a whim subject to local council decisions and who says what… its happened to clubs and pubs before and will continue to happen. But its not a fucking tragedy (over used word) it means you go somewhere else or do something else to enyoy yourself… its not your boat tipping over inpitch blackness in the med whilst fleeing war torn regions and as above, its not building a fucking wall to keep the darkies out…

Who said it is? Who have you seen comparing it to the above?

Originally posted by @Chertsey-Saint

It’s no surprise that even a 92-year-old Polish couple made a beeline for it. Like Cadbury’s or a local football team, the Fabric name held a place in many British hearts – it was a British institution that , between its record label and diverse range of clubnights, provided a one-of-a-kind, often formative experience for a huge portfolio of young people across the UK and abroad. While independent London clubs were being snuffed out for luxury flats, Fabric was an example of how it could be done.

Hmm, interesting, before you started this thread I’d never heard of the place, but then I’ve never really been into clubbing or dance music.

“Big box, little box, fish” or “the shelf stacker” never really did it for me.

Even the article’s author admits that the last time he went there was 2006!!

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I have not suggested anoyone has made a direct comparison Cherts, but am making a point to illustrate the context of the ‘grief’ and ‘reaction’ to a club closing… relative to serious things in life, IMHO, the reaction is disproportionate

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