Background

Club PST (P S T) — Digbeth’s late-night reggae and underground club

Compact, bass-driven Digbeth club with reggae roots, stacked rooms and late-night underground parties.

4.3

Club PST is a compact, late-night nightclub in Digbeth known for reggae, dub and underground electronic nights across multiple floors, including a basement dance floor and rooftop terrace. Housed at 71 Lombard Street, the venue runs weekend party hours and hosts DJ-led sets, live sound systems and themed events in an intimate, community-oriented setting that leans informal and music-first.

A brief summary to Club PST

  • 71 Lombard St, Birmingham, Deritend, B12 0QU, GB
  • +441216225363
  • Duration: 2 to 5 hours
  • Budget
  • Environment icon Indoor
  • Mobile reception: 4 out of 5
  • Friday 9 pm-4 am
  • Saturday 9 pm-4 am

Local tips

  • Arrive early on headline nights to avoid queues and secure space near the dancefloor, as capacity is limited.
  • Check the event listing before you go — nights vary from reggae and dub to jungle and techno, and some events have admission fees.
  • Bring cash as a backup for entry or the bar; have ID ready for door staff who may enforce age checks.
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Club PST location weather suitability

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Discover more about Club PST

An intimate music venue with layered rooms

Club PST occupies a narrow, multi-level footprint on Lombard Street, where three distinct party spaces stack into a restless but intimate whole. The basement houses the tightest dance floor — low-ceiling and built for heavy sound — while the middle rooms open to a busy bar and standing room. A rooftop or upper-level terrace offers a contrasting slice of air and light when programmed events allow. The venue’s compact shape means sound and energy travel quickly between floors, producing an all-night, continuous feel.

The music identity: reggae roots and underground sounds

The club’s programme leans heavily on reggae, dub and related bass-led styles, with frequent nights dedicated to jungle, drum & bass, dubstep and underground electronic music. DJs and sound systems are central: sets are often vinyl-forward, bass-forward and arranged to keep a steady flow between genres. Special events and guest selectors sometimes push the club into more experimental or hybrid line-ups, but the overall profile stays rooted in low-end, rhythm-driven sessions rather than mainstream pop chart nights.

A community-focused atmosphere

PST cultivates a grassroots, come-as-you-are spirit: the layout, crowd and event choices create an atmosphere that feels social and unpretentious. The club has been described locally as a place where regulars and newcomers mingle, with an emphasis on dancing and listening rather than table service or VIP theatrics. Its motto of togetherness is evident in late-night conversations at the bar, the communal dancefloor energy and occasional outdoor summer gatherings when permitted. Internally the venue is functional and music-first rather than decorative: expect exposed finishes, straightforward lighting rigs and a sound system placed for impact rather than visual show. Capacity is modest compared with arena-style venues, producing close-up views of DJs and performers; sightlines are short and the room proportions favour intensity over spectacle. The bar area is practical with basic drink options and quick service aimed at keeping the party moving. Club PST operates primarily as a late-night weekend destination, with its busiest programming on Fridays and Saturdays that stretch well into the early morning. Crowd size and energy shift with the programme: specialist reggae or bass nights attract dancers and listeners who follow particular selectors, while broader underground electronic nights draw a mixed, nocturnal crowd seeking atmosphere and a strong sound system. Accessibility on the ground floor is possible, though the stacked nature of rooms may limit access to all levels. Within Digbeth’s larger creative quarter, PST acts as a connector between soundsystem culture and the city’s wider nightlife ecology. Its reputation is built on booked nights that celebrate bass culture and on hosting playlists that aren’t driven by mainstream commercial trends. For many nights the venue’s scale and programming produce intense, memorable sets — the kind that stay in local playlists and inspire repeat visits from lovers of heavy, dancefloor-centred music.

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