Rave on: Londoners re-live dancing days with kids in tow
For London's ex-clubbers who still want to go dancing but now have kids in tow, a new event allows children to experience a child-friendly nightclub experience with live DJ sets, chill-out areas and club-style lighting.
The location has brought back fond memories, though. "I remember coming here years ago, when I lived in London and we used to go raving. It's a really good idea," she says.
Nearby, Bullough's friend Rebecca Smith, a 40-year-old probation officer sporting a vest top and pixie haircut, does the funky chicken dance with her daughter.
As the girls wander off to get tattoo transfers at the bar -- they will wash off later -- Smith breaks into some more impressive moves.
"Normally it's a bit later and I've had a bit more alcohol, but this is OK, I can rave to this," she says, dancing off.
No funny business
Family discos and raves are increasingly common across London, as the clubbers who once packed world-famous venues such as Ministry of Sound get older and have children.
"We haven't stopped being people with our own interests," said Hannah Saunders, a 45-year-old former civil servant who organised this party.
Her events company, Big Fish Little Fish, is aimed at -- and the pun is intended -- "two-to-four hour party people" who like to strut their stuff before getting home for the kids' bedtime.
Saunders used to spend her weekends at clubs and warehouse parties and her holidays in Ibiza.
Now with two children under four, she found no shortage of family-friendly musical events but despaired at the chart-topping pop tunes that they played.

"My kids are happy listening to my favourite drum'n'bass tracks, so I knew it would be fine," she said.
Given the nature of the dance music scene, many of the parents here are likely to have indulged in recreational drugs in the past.
But the only sign of nefarious behaviour is a group of children in a corner silently trading sparkly ribbons from the glitter cannon.
By the end of the party there are empty plastic pint glasses piled up on tables, but most people are sober, fully aware of their responsibilities as parents.
"The toxins we were pouring into our bodies (when we were younger) were neither here nor there -- actually we still like music and dancing, and we can still do that," Saunders said.

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