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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
National
Caroline Barry & Milica Cosic

Eerie scenes show inside forgotten nightclub - and the disco ball is still there

Eerie pictures have been captured showing the inside of a forgotten nightclub - complete with the disco ball and used cocktail glasses.

The lively nightclub has now been lost in time and let abandoned, but photographs show what the venue would have looked like if it was still operational today.

While this particular Nottingham nightclub has been rebranded many times, many people may know it best as Breeze or Lost Weekend, report Nottinghamshire Live.

The popular club was also known by its other names, that included The House - which is what it was called during the mid-1990s - and Voodoo Lounge.

A pair of shoes have been left sitting on the side of the club for years (Nottingham Post/Marie Wilson.)

There were also club nights such as Hotdog, Love Zoo and DJ Peter Martine's successful Revolution held there over the years.

But following the closure of Lost Weekend it was empty for about five years, before reopening on New Year's Eve, 2012, as Breeze nightclub - after a whopping £200,000 refurbishment.

Now, the remnants of the nightclub on Huntingdon Street have been captured, as glasses, bottles and even a pair of shoes act as a time capsule.

Alcohol is still sitting at the bar, waiting to be poured (Nottingham Post/Marie Wilson.)

The club still looks as it did when its doors closed over a decade ago after the nightclub, that was then called Breeze, closed down.

A pair of sky-high red platforms sit on the bar counter while there are cans of energy drinks all over the floor.

And a lonely bottle of Jagermeister and a strange green-looking liquid is positioned on the top shelf waiting to be poured as empty glasses strewn over a counter wait for the drinks to be poured into them.

The old discoball still lights up the venue (Nottingham Post/Marie Wilson.)

Brushing past the thick cobwebs and looking up, the disco ball is positioned above the dancefloor as it lights up the room, while the DJ box at the back still stands.

Another photo shows tickets from previous celebrations littering the bar counter.

One image also shows a New Year's Eve ticket, with a £10 entrance and a free glass of champagne on entry.

The pictures show what the club would look like if it was still operational today (Nottingham Post/Marie Wilson.)

While the club had two floors, the steps up were warped from the dampness so the famous balcony could only be photographed from below, showing where you you could watch the dancefloor while having a pint.

And the facade of the venue is completely boarded as graffiti has been drawn on the steel security screens as the venue has been left abandoned.

Meanwhile, last year, an urban explorer took pictures of Mode nightclub in Bradford city centre, which was set on fire six years ago after closing to the public back in 2011.

The adventurer, who goes by the name Bearded Reality, made a surprising discovery as he ventured deeper into the nightclub.

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