• Welcome to this forum . We are a worldwide group with a common interest in Birmingham and its history. While here, please follow a few simple rules. We ask that you respect other members, thank those who have helped you and please keep your contributions on-topic with the thread.

    We do hope you enjoy your visit. BHF Admin Team

Opposite Lock Club

  • Thread starter Thread starter the doc
  • Start date Start date
Used to be a member of the Opposite Lock for a number of years in the mid 1970s. A great club. She t many happy hours there on Thursday, Friday's and Saturday nights. Was a proud owner of an Opposite Lock car sticker which was displayed on my TR7.
Happy Days
 
Loved the place. Only a member for a year or two while I lived in Solihull (1969-1971).
Had some fantastic times there. I seem to recall a minimal Count Basie band
playing there one night and a couple of other memorable people who's names I can't recall.
Subsequently moved to Coventry and a couple of years later, moved back down south.
A year or so later, we were devastated when The Tavern in the Town and the Mulberry Bush were bombed.
We used to go to one or the other every Saturday for lunch.
Still love Birmingham, but it's been 50+ years since, but I still have a soft spot for it.
Good luck Brum.
 
Saw Manard Ferguson “Ex Stan Kenton band” at the Opposite Lock, I had never heard the trumpet played so well, and never heard it played as good since. wow what a horn player.
 
I know housing is important but I don't think such a tall building at the edge of the canal is appropriate. If it interests you to object to the removal of the building that housed the Opposite Lock and the construction of such a monster at the side of the canal here is the place to write to:- 1720090665083.png
 
Here is the artists impression for the construction on Gas Street:-
 

Attachments

  • Gas Street artists impression.jpg
    Gas Street artists impression.jpg
    313.7 KB · Views: 13
Here is the artists impression for the construction on Gas Street:-
Yes I did read about that on the BBC Birmingham website yesterday :(
l live in London now (where that sort of thing is happening all the time sadly) so I wouldn't be eligible to appeal. Very sad times, I never went to the Opposite Lock but I did go to the sister club The Factory which was in the building next door.
 
Does anyone remember the "Opposite Lock" Club ??

It was on a canal in Birmingham on the Broad Street side of the city and you entered the club from the canal bank (Canal Street?).

It was very lively place and the DJ was an avid Birmingham City FC fan who punctuated the evening's gyrations with "Keep Right On To The End OF The Road". From memory it was one pound for annual membership or 2/6d for visitors.

It was there last time I looked 45 years ago but no doubt has long disappeared. Anyone know what happened to it ??

Martin (Opposite Lock Club) & I in the last E Type leading the Birmingham Motoring Festival 1975
 

Attachments

  • X HDU555N Birmingham Motoring Festival 1975.jpg
    X HDU555N Birmingham Motoring Festival 1975.jpg
    530.2 KB · Views: 35
YesIn 1966 I worked at Pauline Mayman`s the sports car and accessory shop in Broad St. I rememember a guy with a beard coming in to show us plans for a club he wanted to locate in an old building in Gas St. We thought he was mad...he wasn`t of course...He also bought us the motor race around the streets...Is Martin still around?

Yes, Martin is still around.
 
Back
Top