A summer vacation in Manchester brings new life to the city – festival artists and market traders replace the soccer crowds and university students. Book a summer hotel in Manchester to see this always lively city take on a fresh burst of energy.

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    Sporting city

    Sporting city

    The soccer season may be resting but warm summer days mean cricket and hours on the terraces at Old Trafford cricket ground, home of Lancashire County Cricket Club. Camp out in the shade of the pavilion for days during an international test match, or catch a high-speed twenty20 evening game under the floodlights. With the soccer over for the summer, relive the game’s drama with a tour of Manchester United’s Old Trafford stadium, the so-called ‘Theatre of Dreams’. Follow United legends’ footsteps through the players’ tunnel and into the changing rooms and imagine the tension in the manager’s dug-out. Admire contemporary stadium architecture – velodromes, gyms and arenas – condensed in SportCity to the east of the city center. It is the new home of Manchester City and hosted the 2002 Commonwealth Games village.

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    Summer festivals

    Summer festivals

    DJs play free at the Festival Pavilion, which stands like a giant tepee in Albert Square during July’s Manchester International Festival. The lofty Town Hall becomes a hive of family activity with kids’ performers and circus acts. Earlier in May, the FutureEverything digital festival brings technology to town with leftfield arts and electronic music. Flamboyant carnival floats contrast with a silent candlelit vigil during August’s huge gay event, Manchester Pride.

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    A canalside or pub garden pint

    A canalside or pub garden pint
    • Food
    • Nightlife

    Beer gardens fill up Manchester’s sleepy canalside corners during warm summer evenings. After-work crowds gather for barbeques and beers on the patio at Dukes 92 on the Rochdale Canal. The White Lion is a traditional British pub overlooking the ruins of the Castlefield Roman fort. Canal Street draws the gay community over its footbridges to waterfront bars – on hot days Eden serves drinks on a barge. For a drink while taking in some culture, try The Lowry arts center’s terraces at Salford Quays. Back in the city center, the green-tiled, grade II-listed Peveril of the Peak pub serves casks of real ale and is rumored to be haunted.

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    Green Manchester

    Green Manchester
    • Adventure
    • Budget
    • Couples
    • Photo

    Hop on the Metrolink tram to Heaton Park just north of the city center for open-air performances of Shakespeare. The walled garden opens its gates for fragrant horticultural fairs and summer bedding plants are on sale in the old kitchen gardens. For a true metropolitan green space head to Whitworth Park on Oxford Road and join city dwellers, academics and dog walkers on its tree-lined walkways. Traverse Manchester by following the Rochdale Canal, which you can pick up near Piccadilly Station. Amble along the towpath past the sleepy locks, low bridges and barges.

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    Summer market days

    Summer market days
    • Couples
    • Families
    • Food
    • Photo
    • Shoppers

    The height of summer draws the best specialist traders to the city center. Smokey cheeses, game and fish sell at the Real Food Market in Piccadilly Gardens all summer long and St Ann’s Square launches new titles in July’s Book Market. Buy summer cut flowers when blooms at the Piccadilly Gardens Flower Market are at their best. The rainbow-colored stalls are bursting with clothing and jewelry in the Gay Village enclave during the Pride Market in August.