
The report by Bompas and Parr suggested clubs could move into deserted office blocks at evenings and weekends.
As remote work reshapes city life, London’s iconic financial districts are facing a dramatic identity shift. Once abuzz with suited professionals and high-stakes trading, areas like Canary Wharf and the City of London are now eerily quiet on Fridays and weekends. But a new vision could inject life—and lights—back into these spaces.
Creative studio Bompas and Parr has proposed a bold idea in its latest leisure trend report: converting deserted office blocks into late-night party zones. These urban canyons, emptied by the work-from-home revolution, could soon echo with music instead of memos.
From Corporate Towers to Clubbing Temples
The report paints a vivid picture. Office lobbies becoming DJ stages. Rooftops turning into open-air dance floors. Empty boardrooms hosting immersive rave experiences. It envisions a nightlife utopia where capitalism and counterculture collide in glass-and-steel towers.
“By day, it's suits and stocks. By night, it's strobes and sound systems,” the report notes, suggesting a dual-purpose future for city infrastructure.
Why It Might Actually Work
While the concept sounds unconventional, industry leaders believe it holds promise. Michael Kill, CEO of the Night Time Industries Association (NTIA), highlights the practical benefits. With fewer residents in these districts—only 8,500 people live in the City of London compared to 500,000 workers—there’s a significantly reduced risk of noise complaints.
“Given the limited residential population, this really could work,” Kill said. “It makes sense for nightlife to grow in such spaces, especially when traditional areas are restricted by noise regulations.”
The Impact of Hybrid Work Culture
The shift to hybrid work has deeply impacted footfall in central business areas. Mondays and Fridays are now often remote workdays, turning long weekends into the norm. Landlords are starting to see weekends as untapped commercial opportunities.
“The City shuts down after Friday evening,” Kill explained. “With fewer people coming in five days a week, property owners are looking for innovative ways to repurpose their assets. Nightlife could be the answer.”
A Lifeline for UK Nightlife Industry
The nightlife sector in the UK is at a tipping point. According to the NTIA, if current trends continue, nightclubs could become extinct by 2029. The number of operational venues has more than halved since 2013, a decline that worsened during the pandemic lockdowns.
Kill says the industry is evolving to survive, experimenting with new formats like light clubbing, hybrid spaces, and multifunctional venues that double as conference zones. “The aim is to keep people coming back to dancefloors—whether that’s for a rave or a networking event,” he said.
Tapping Into the Over-50s Rave Revival
One surprising trend shaping the future of nightlife is the growing demand from the over-50s demographic. The same generation that embraced ‘60s rock, ‘70s disco, and ‘90s rave culture is returning to the scene.
“Older generations are rediscovering club culture. They want to relive those rave memories,” Kill shared. “They’re propping up the industry in many ways. This is no longer just a youth market—it’s a nostalgic revival.”
Bompas and Parr’s report agrees, suggesting that nightlife venues which cater to this group could thrive in coming years.
Zoning Changes on the Horizon?
To make this transformation possible, zoning rules may need to adapt. Discussions are already underway to introduce preferential planning and licensing policies for hospitality businesses in financial districts.
With the combination of underused real estate, supportive planning, and a shifting cultural appetite, London's financial heart could beat anew—not with spreadsheets, but with subwoofers.
The future of nightlife in London might just lie 30 floors up, where once quarterly reports ruled, and now laser lights dance across the skyline.

