This is a strange building, on at least three if not four levels, used currently for art and music events of varying quality.
When you first approach this place, it is through a narrow passageway off the High Street, that is guarded by two security staff who will check you for any glass or alcohol. When you get to the Bussey Building itself (named after the large advertisements for cricket bat manufacturers Bussey & Co that use to adorn the building), the first thing you are surprised by is the urban artwork and grafitti on the walls, with a huge three-story black and white drawing of a parrot (currently) dominating proceedings.
One's first impression largely thanks to the whole semi-clandestine approach to the building (none of the artwork can be seen from street level) is that one has stumbled across an exciting squat of the type one would expect to find in Berlin or Prague. However, this is where the comparisons sadly end. This is not a squat, but a commercial venture. The building is owned by Peckham Business Park Ltd and is being rented out, legally, for events that are trying to be as underground as possible but, when you consider the prices, are actually pretty overground to be honest.
For a start, when I've been, each floor has been rented out to a different party, each charging £10. Now, while this is a large building, so to have a different price for each floor makes it a very small venue in each case. The middle floor is at least divided into three sections so there could be scope for more than one DJ, but with considerable music bleed.
Prices for drinks are certainly commercial, and expect to pay £3.50 for a can of lukewarm Red Stripe, or £12 for a bottle of cheap and nasty plonk. The worst thing though is the fact that the smoking area, while really nice (in the courtyard as you go in), is three floors down if you happen to be on the upper levels. This is really inconvenient. By the time you have made it back up to the second floor, you want to go back down for another cigarette. A proper underground venue or a squat would have no rules about smoking, of course. However, even though you are led to believe you are entering into an underground paradise, you are being watched by the security guys who will be sure to be most unpleasant if they catch you smoking anywhere other than the courtyard. So, all in all, it doesn't feel very relaxing and the whole thing smacks of being terribly fake. Though the hipsters that attend probably feel they're doing something very edgy. The fools.
The only reason I have gone there is if there are certain DJs I really want to see. The music can be really very good (albeit terribly loud at times so bring earplugs if you value your hearing), and certainly plenty of underground sounds such as psytrance, acid techno and acid house are commonplace. But with the smoking policy, and the smoking area so far away from anywhere, it does not appeal very much to me.
I will be back; I just won't go out of my way. As for the squat scene, I go to plenty of real-life squat parties rather than this anodyne recreation of one. read more