Led by a real Mancunian and architect, this tour reveals the hidden Manchester most visitors miss... from protest and music to changing streets and overlooked details.
We'll meet inside the covered Library Walk "lobby" that connects Central Library with the Town Hall Extension. Your guide will have a yellow flag so you can easily identify them.
Outside the Old Wellington and Sinclairs Oyster Bar.
We begin between two of Manchester’s major civic buildings, at Library Walk, a controversial modern link that says a lot about how the city continues to change. We then explore Manchester’s long relationship with public learning, radical ideas and civic identity. Hidden around the building are subtle references to the Peterloo Massacre, offering a powerful reminder that Manchester’s story is not only about industry and growth, but also about protest, memory and who gets remembered.
Beside the site of the Peterloo Massacre, we explore one of the defining moments in Manchester’s history and how it shaped the city’s political identity. This is not just a stop about a tragic event, but about how its legacy still echoes through Manchester’s public spaces, institutions and values. We’ll also connect Peterloo to later developments in the city, showing how one event influenced everything from civic change to the later story of the Free Trade Hall.
Albert Square is often introduced through the Town Hall alone, but this stop goes further. Alongside the building’s history, restoration and symbolism, we look at the emblems and details that help define Manchester’s civic identity. We also focus on less obvious features in the square, including public artworks and overlooked design elements, using them to explore how the city presents itself, what it chooses to celebrate, and how the past is carried into the present.
This part of the tour looks at a quieter but revealing side of the city centre. Around St Mary’s, known as the Hidden Gem, we explore old passages, alleyways and fragments of historic street patterns that survive among larger modern blocks. It is a chance to think about how cities evolve: what gets preserved, what gets widened, what disappears completely, and how much of old Manchester still survives in unexpected corners. It is also where the city’s lost ginnels and intimate spaces become part of the story.
St Ann’s Square opens up another chapter of Manchester’s story. Here we look at the church, the surrounding architecture and the statues that reveal changing attitudes to religion, politics, commerce and public memory. The square also allows us to talk about what stood here before - Acres Field - and how this part of the city evolved from a more open landscape into one of central Manchester’s key historic spaces. It is a great example of how layers of the city remain visible if you know where to look.
Here the tour shifts into Manchester’s cultural history, linking politics, place and music. We explore connections between Peterloo, the Free Trade Hall, the famous Sex Pistols gig, the emergence of Factory Records, and the wider underground scene that helped shape modern Manchester. Corbiere’s becomes part of that story too, not just as a bar, but as a small, characterful venue tied into the city’s creative life. This stop helps show how Manchester’s identity was shaped as much by subculture and sound as by commerce and architecture.
Here the tour looks at power, punishment and changing urban life. Around King Street, we trace Manchester’s housing story, from Georgian townhouses and residential streets to the changing city centre of today. Nearby Back Pool Fold reveals a darker, lesser-known layer of Manchester’s past, where punishment and control once played out in public space. It is a stop that shows how even quiet corners can hold stories most people would never guess.
At the Royal Exchange, we look at cotton, trade, conflict and reinvention. This stop explores Manchester’s commercial rise, the legacy of the cotton industry, and the later transformation of the building into a theatre. It is also a chance to talk about how the 69 Theatre Company helped secure a new future for part of the old exchange, showing how historic buildings sometimes survive not by staying the same, but by being imaginatively reused.
This stop focuses on the old marketplace and the original Shambles area, where trade, slaughter, commerce and everyday life once sat right at the heart of the city. It helps explain how very different this part of Manchester once was, and how dramatically the character of the city centre has changed over time. This is also where the tour can touch on the contrast between old market life and the polished commercial city visitors see today.
We finish at the current Shambles, where relocated historic pubs tell a story of survival, compromise and reinvention. This is the perfect place to talk about the long-term effects of wartime bomb damage, the 1996 IRA bomb, and the rebuilding that followed. Few places capture Manchester’s changing appearance so clearly: old buildings moved, old settings lost, and the city physically reassembled around them. It is a fitting end point for a tour about a city that never stops rewriting itself.
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance of the experience for a full refund.
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