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Home > Lancashire >
Manchester > M9
> Junction Hotel
Junction Hotel
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Date of photo: 2022 |
Picture source: Ian
Chapman |
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The Junction Hotel was situated at 359
Queens Road. |
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From TheManc, 2021 |
The brilliantly engineered curved
structure sat on the corner of Queens Road dates back to the late 1800s and
is also widely referred to as the Junction Inn or the Junction Hotel – a
drinking hole that many locals consider as one of the more significant of
north Manchester’s past.
Today, the building is a shell of its former self and as far as we’re aware,
is currently still on the market for upwards of £300,000 with no interest
from prospective developers.
The Grade II listed building has played host to a number of ventures in its
time, more notably the previously mentioned Hellfire Club which launched in
2006 and peacocked as a horror-themed bar home to “nefarious activities”.
In the mid-2000s it’s said that biker gangs visited regularly and it
survived comfortably due to a large regular clientele that called the place
home.
Ironically, however, the Hellfire Club succumbed to a hellfire of its own in
2014 and shut down – leaving a much-adored history of revelling and
memorable evenings in its wake.
A year later, after a lavish refurbishment, Cirque Manchester took over.
Cirque Manchester, described at the time as “the hidden gem” Manchester had
been waiting for, was a unique champagne-house bar set over two floors.
The 250-cap venue opened each weekend and aimed to lure punters of similar
venues in Manchester city centre out of town for “unparalleled service and a
luxurious drinks menu”.
With its vintage lounge that boasted VIP table service and glamorous
waitresses, Cirque failed to become the elite celebrity hangout that it
promised and closed for a rebrand just one year after its launch.
That’s when it got sexy. Literally.
Cirque’s owners, not wanting to fail (and clearly believing in such an
iconic building), enlisted the services of Cheryl Smith, best known for
organising Sexhibition, the North’s biggest sex festival.
Keeping its name, the club’s new promoter turned the building into a
burlesque emporium with the hope of attracting a more exclusive clientele
during a time in which a ‘burlesque boom’ was sweeping Manchester’s
nighttime landscape.
Equipped for fetish and BDSM nights, Cirque had brought back some of the
nefarious energy that the building was famous for during its long stint as
the Hellfire Club – and after rebranding away from a Deansgate crowd and
focusing more on an exclusive audience on the rise, the club experienced
some immediate success.
But that success was short lived, and a pattern had officially formed on the
corner of Queens Road. The old Hellfire Club, or Junction Inn, or Junction
Hotel, was struggling to rediscover its identity and multiple failed
attempts at reinvigorating it had left it derelict.
Then the hellfires returned.
Derelict buildings in north Manchester don’t stand for long without being
savaged by fire, and in 2019, the still-photogenic curved building had
become home to multiple blazes, leaving it run-down and home to mountains of
scorched rubbish and timber.
With its gutted Victorian-interior and unsafe floors and stairwells, over
the last few years, the idea of redeveloping this historic landmark has
become an off-putting prospect for property developers – but it can’t be
long until someone decides that turning it into flats just two miles from
Manchester city centre could be a lucrative proposition.
In the meantime, it continues to stand strong and is remembered by many as a
place in which they laughed with friends, filled their bellies, or saw some
sh*t they’ll never forget.
Long live the Hellfire Club! |
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