Funding has shrunk and hundreds of youth clubs have closed. But those that remain are trying to reinvent what youth services look like.

It's 17:00 on Thursday in Bradford and as I approach a three-storey former country pub, drill music booms from the basement. The snappy, rhythmic beats are not what you expect inside this old, listed building. This is where teenagers from Gypsy, traveller and Roma communities get together every week. Older generations would call this a youth club but when I meet 16-year-old Sterling, he's quick to correct me: "Youth clubs are out of style." As he fiddles with his cap, I suggest that this very building is in fact a re-branded model of a youth club. "I mean, like, all right, it's similar, it has a resemblance to a youth club," he says. "But I view it more of a place to hang out, eat food and hustle." Sterling has been coming here for two years. The club is called Romalandia and calls itself a "cultural centre" on its social media pages. The basement music studio is by far the most popular space, where, as Sterling puts it, "if you're a young rapper you get yourself a free producer", as well as the chance to socialise and have fun. But whether you call it a youth club or a cultural centre, places like this are becoming increasingly rare in England and Wales.