New Five-Floor Queer Club Coven Opens in Former G-A-Y Space in Soho
Coven: Five-Floor Queer Club Opens in Former G-A-Y Soho

Coven: Headquarters, a new five-floor queer club, has opened at the iconic former G-A-Y bar at 30 Old Compton Street in Soho. The venue, which bills itself as a space for 'every letter of LGBTQIA', launched this week, nine months after G-A-Y permanently closed its doors in October 2025.

From Club Night to Major Venue

The venue is the brainchild of Matthew Jacobs Morgan, who started Coven as a club night in Hackney Wick just last year. Morgan rapidly scaled the concept into a major queer cultural project, and its bricks-and-mortar venue opened on June 19, 2026. G-A-Y owner Jeremy Joseph cited rent issues, the area's dwindling gay identity, and NIMBYs as reasons for closure, announcing he would prioritise Heaven nightclub instead.

Honouring History, Establishing Identity

Frequenters of G-A-Y may find plenty of the old bar's remnants in the new venue. One of the screens downstairs still has the old logo dimly but permanently burned on, while stacks of branded plastic cups still sit in the cupboards. Morgan told Time Out: 'A month or two before [G-A-Y] closed I came here with a friend and it did feel a little bit sad. A lot of the energy that used to be there wasn't anymore. But it is and always has been a very important space for the community – I want to make sure I'm doing it for them.'

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Coven aims to honour the history of the location while confidently establishing its own identity. In the main room, an antique fountain sits centre stage filled with books on queer history, and just a few metres away a grand piano gleams beneath a wall of screens. A battered shell mirror sits in the corner upstairs, brought from the club night's original Hackney Wick venue.

Day and Night Offerings

By night, Coven is a nightclub featuring live music, cabaret (hence the piano), and DJs. Having officially opened its doors on Friday June 19, live DJs will power a rotating schedule of themed nights from Afrobeat to techno. There's also daytime revelry, which kicked off with a Solstice Day Rave on June 21. The club currently operates with a 1am curfew.

During the day, Coven operates as a café and community hub complete with coffee tables and chairs for those who want somewhere to work. 'So many queer people are creatives – we end up working from home and being in a bit of a vacuum,' said Morgan. 'Giving people the option to be in a community and have somewhere they can go during the day is really exciting.' A tarot reader also works the space from 5pm until close, doing back-to-back readings and doubling as the toilet attendant.

Navigating Soho's Nightlife Tensions

Coven opens at a tense moment for Soho nightlife. Last month, residents group Soho Society voted at its AGM to oppose new bar and restaurant licence applications in the neighbourhood, including renewals and anything that wants to stay open past the 11pm curfew. Mayor Sadiq Khan called the move 'bad for London' and said new licensing powers could be used to overrule local objections. However, Coven has cast a charm offensive on the locals, as the neighbourhood group is totally on board. 'The Soho Society has been extremely supportive of me,' Morgan told Time Out. 'Before the contract was even sorted, they invited me to their executive committee meeting. They said they found it very sad that so many queer spaces have closed and feel like the community doesn't come to the area as much anymore.'

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