Millions of tourists visit Manchester each year, from the UK and beyond. The city has everything you would expect from a major international destination: world-class sports stadiums, art galleries, theatres, shopping and more. But, as former Factory records boss Tony Wilson said: ”This is Manchester. We do things differently here.”
That’s why a group of Manchester Met academics has set up Haunt Manchester, a trailblazing, public-facing initiative to promote the city’s Gothic heritage as a unique tourist attraction, hosting a series of public events for all ages.
Since its inception in 2018, Haunt Manchester has contributed to the cultural life of the city, inspiring new work and bringing together a community of academics, artists, entrepreneurs, and enthusiasts. In the COVID-19 recovery period, the team hopes to promote further economic growth and activity, even acting as a beacon to inspire similar projects in other cities.
Hosted on the tourism website Visit Manchester, and growing out of the Manchester Centre for Gothic Studies (MCGS) and the annual Gothic Manchester Festival, Haunt Manchester’s aim is to celebrate and promote the atmospheric, weird and wonderful side of Greater Manchester through in-person and digital events.
Led by researchers Prof Dale Townshend and Dr Matt Foley, alongside research impact manager Helen Darby and other members of staff in MCGS, the project has helped to bring together a network of people and organisations around the region. Building the network would not have been possible without the dedication and commitment of former Haunt editor Emily Oldfield.
For Dale, the goal of Haunt Manchester is “to generate and foster new cultural production – for example Helen and Matt inspired the BBC Philharmonic to produce a concert of scores from horror films as part of the Gothic Manchester Festival in 2018, which was broadcast on Radio 3.
“We’ve also worked with Manchester Gothic Arts Group (MGAG) on events, and the Dancehouse Theatre and Dance Company to put on a show called Monster Mash, linked to the festival themes. It’s all about supporting and inspiring local artists and generating new productions.
“Each of these events has been underpinned by research undertaken in MCGS, too, and Haunt Manchester is one of the ways in which we are able to share and communicate our own research interests with the broader community.”
A series of fortunate events
Other events organised by the team include walking tours and a fashion show with local young designers, and their collaborators include HOME arts centre, Selfridge’s, the John Rylands Library, alternative shopping hub Afflecks Palace and the annual Halloween in the City celebration.
Matt adds that Haunt Manchester has also built up links between businesses and artists in the city and beyond: “Through Haunt we’ve also engaged small business and put on fairs and events with a range of artists and producers who are Gothically-themed. We’ve organised networking fairs, including an online Gothic market during lockdown with Bristol Goth and Alternative Market, which was attended by around 500 people. Expanding the Haunt brand beyond Manchester, we launched our second Haunt site with Destination Bristol in 2020.”
The Haunt initiative, in itself, serves as “a very powerful model to connect academic work to the tourism industry within a city or space – showing that research can be an economic driver for tourism.”