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As the clocks go back this weekend, Night Czar encourages Londoners and visitors to make the most of the longer nights and support the capital’s nightlife

Created on
27 October 2023

As the clocks go back this weekend, Night Czar encourages Londoners and visitors to make the most of the longer nights and support the capital’s nightlife

  • The capital has roared back from the impact of the pandemic and there are a huge range of autumn and winter events to enjoy during the longer nights, with new venues and later openings
  • Night Czar encourages everyone to support 24-hour London as the clocks change on Saturday night
  • Winter is a key time for culture and hospitality and Night Czar urges Government to do more to support businesses

 

As the clocks go back this weekend, London’s Night Czar Amy Lamé is encouraging Londoners and visitors to enjoy the longer nights and support our world-leading nightlife, as she urged Government to do more to help the culture and hospitality industries.

 

London has been roaring back this summer with more than one million additional tourists visiting the city in the three months to June, one million people attending live music shows in one week in July, and bumper cinema sales with Barbie and Oppenheimer.

 

In recent months London’s nightlife has been boosted BY the opening of Drumsheds in Tottenham, late-night licences for HERE and The Lower Third in Tottenham Court Road and extended hours for Electric Ballroom in Camden, and She Soho and Little Ku in Soho. The Institute of Contemporary Arts on The Mall has also adjusted its hours to attract later visitors.

 

The capital’s nightlife has been named a top strength compared to competitor cities, and, despite some changes in work patterns, Friday and Saturday nights remain the most popular nights of the week in central London with people travelling in for evenings out.

 

The Mayor’s Night Time Enterprise Zones have helped support the capital’s high streets with Bromley High Street seeing an increase in visitors of 127 per cent after 9pm during its range of events. Vauxhall has seen visitor numbers increase by 28 per cent for events, and Woolwich has seen footfall increase by 23 per cent across 10 events.

 

Across the weekend of October 14-15, ridership figures from TfL show more than 107,000 entries and exits took place at stations on the Night Tube and Night Overground between 0030 and 0430 on Friday night. On Saturday night, the first night of Madonna’s world tour at the O2, there were more than 145,000 entries and exits during Night Tube hours.

 

However, the hospitality industry is facing significant pressures including staff shortages, the spiralling costs of doing business, and concerns about insecure leases and licensing issues. That’s why as the sector’s golden quarter begins, London’s Night Czar is urging Ministers to do more to help businesses deal with the impact of the cost-of-living crisis and ensure they can reap the benefits of these vital winter months into the new year – including scrapping VAT-free shopping to attract international visitors.

 

The Mayor has been doing all he can to support the capital’s nightlife, culture and tourism industries. He has created the most pro-pub and night-time planning strategy the capital has ever seen, and asked every borough to develop a night time strategy to support the economy and communities at night. He has supported Londoners seeking hospitality careers through the Mayor's Skills Academy. Over the last three years, his ‘Let’s Do London’ campaign – which encouraged tourists to visit the capital following the pandemic – has attracted over 850,000 additional visitors, who in turn contributed £360m to London’s economy.

 

London’s Night Czar has also been supporting venues through the Mayor’s Culture and Community Spaces at Risk programme, cutting red tape through the Business Friendly Licensing Fund, working closely with the sector through roundtables and night surgeries across the capital, and encouraging more businesses and organisations to sign up to the Women's Night Safety Charter.

 

There is a range of events to enjoy across the capital in the coming months as Londoners and visitors prepare to celebrate Halloween, bonfire night and Christmas. These include the Croydonites Festival, part of the Mayor’s London Borough of Culture programme, spectacular fireworks and light displays, ice rinks popping up at well-known locations including Battersea Power Station, the Southbank Centre Winter Festival and a host of Christmas markets. All these alongside the regular offer provided by London’s bars, pubs, restaurants and cultural venues.

 

London’s Night Czar Amy Lamé said: “London’s nightlife is the best in the world and as the clocks change this weekend I encourage Londoners and visitors to the capital to enjoy that extra hour and make the most of our longer winter nights. There are so many fantastic events and venues to experience, and I’m delighted that in recent months we’ve seen our capital roaring back from the impact of the pandemic. However, our nightlife, culture and hospitality industries are still facing significant challenges. We’re committed to doing all we can to provide our support as we build a more prosperous London for all, but we need Ministers to urgently step forward to provide the assistance so these vital businesses can reap the benefits of the vital ‘golden quarter’.”

 

Bengi Unsal, director of Institute of Contemporary Arts, said: “London's vibrant nightlife is a fundamental element to the city's distinct uniqueness. At the ICA, we've expanded our operating hours to introduce an exciting late-night programme that caters to a wide range of interests. Our aim is to stimulate your curiosity and provide a platform for meaningful conversations whether it be via a workshop, exhibition, gig, club event, film or even over a cocktail. We're committed to embracing the night-time experience.”

 

Bernard Donoghue OBE, Director of ALVA – The Association of Leading Visitor Attractions, said: “From this weekend London is gearing-up for one of the busiest and most colourful times of the year: Halloween, Diwali, Christmas, New Year and, of course, Panto Season! More and more of our cultural organisations, like museums and galleries, now offer late night events and programmes; light festivals and lighting-up London have become a really important part of London's allure; and we are the world's capital of panto. Oh yes we are. Enjoy everything that late night London has to offer and see the capital come alive after dark."

 

Kate Nicholls, UKHospitality Chief Executive, said: “The upturn in elements of London’s nightlife sector is great news, with new openings providing consumers with an even wider choice of social and entertainment venues to enjoy this winter. It is particularly heartening given the challenges that the hospitality sector continues to face, with inflation, energy prices and staff shortages causing a strain on businesses across the UK. We urge the Government to help maintain this momentum by relieving cost pressures through the extension of business rates relief and reviewing the rate of VAT for hospitality, which will spur further growth, the creation of jobs and investment in local communities.”

 

Ros Morgan, Chief Executive of Heart of London Business Alliance, said: “The West End is the cultural heart of London with a night-time experience that is unparalleled. The capital’s night-time cultural offer rivals anywhere in the world, with a unique combination of theatres, museums, entertainment, hospitality, traditions, innovations, architecture and heritage. It drives 20 per cent of our area’s economy, but as we continue our recovery from the pandemic we need to work in partnership to help the area meet its full potential, as our evening and night-time economy strategy points out.”

 


Notes to editors

London’s music scene roars back as more than 1 million people attend live music events across the capital in one week - https://www.london.gov.uk/media-centre/mayors-press-release/londons-music-scene-roars-back-as-more-than-1-million-people-attend-live-music-events-across-the-capital-in-one-week

 

Data from the Office for National Statistics shows there were 5.315m foreign visitors to London in the three months to June, up a quarter on the 4.25million in the same quarter last year. https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/leisureandtourism

 

London’s Visitor Experience Strategy - Customer reviews for London nightlife are significantly stronger than benchmark cities (8.8 versus 8.5) https://www.londonandpartners.com/our-insight/tourism-vision

 

The Friday Effect in the Central Activities Zone (CAZ) - https://data.london.gov.uk/high-street-data-service/

 

The Mayor’s Let’s Do London campaign was launched in May 2021 - the biggest domestic tourism campaign the capital has ever seen - to bring Londoners and visitors from across the UK safely back to central London to enjoy the city’s world-class culture, nightlife, retail and hospitality. For more information visit https://www.london.gov.uk/programmes-strategies/arts-and-culture/lets-do-london

 

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