Birmingham LGBT opens new purpose‑built centre in Birmingham’s Gay Village

Birmingham LGBT opens new purpose‑built centre in Birmingham’s Gay Village

Birmingham LGBT, the largest LGBTQ+ support service in the Midlands, has officially opened its new purpose‑built centre in Birmingham’s Gay Village.  

The expanded centre follows 12 years at the organisation’s previous Holloway Circus site and represents a major milestone in the charity’s continued growth and service delivery.  

Located on Hurst Street, the new, fully accessible ground‑floor centre includes clinical and consultation rooms, hireable meeting spaces and a large communal area designed to support events, activities and community connection.  

The centre was formally opened in late January by award‑winning former Birmingham Poet Laureate Jasmine Gardosi and actor Annie Wallace, the first trans performer to play a regular trans character in a British soap. 

Founded in 2002, Birmingham LGBT opened the UK’s first LGBTQ+ Health & Wellbeing Centre in 2013. The organisation has since grown from a team of two to 26, delivering services to thousands of people each year including sexual health testing, domestic abuse support, counselling, youth work, older‑people’s programmes, substance‑use services, outreach and peer groups alongside Shout, the charity’s popular arts and culture programme. 

Steph Keeble, Director of Birmingham LGBT, said: “This new centre represents a major step forward for LGBTQ+ support in the city. We now have a purpose‑built space that reflects the needs of our diverse community and provides room for services to grow.” 

The centre has been delivered through Outpost Management’s joint venture with BlackRock Real Estate, in partnership with the Galliard Apsley Partnership, and forms part of Outpost’s Lower Essex Street development. 

Laura‑Jayne Canneman, Operations Director at Outpost Management, said: “Creating spaces where everyone feels respected and included is central to our mission. This new centre will be an important addition to the area’s vibrant community.”

The centre is now open at 151 Hurst Street, Birmingham B5 6EW, with opening hours from Monday to Saturday. Full details and service information can be found HERE.

Support independent LGBTQ+ journalism

Scene was founded in Brighton in 1993, at a time when news stories about Pride protests were considered radical.

Since then, Scene has remained proudly independent, building a platform for queer voices. Every subscription helps us to report on the stories that matter to LGBTQ+ people across the UK and beyond.


Your support funds our journalists and contributes to Pride Community Foundation’s grant-making and policy work.


Subscribe today
Consent Preferences