These are 15 of the strangest - and creepiest - urban legends that have circulated Leeds for the last few decades.
1. The University of Leeds shaky foundations
This one is actually true - The LC Miall Building, part of the University of Leeds, was designed with a cellular basement structure as it sits on a faultline in the earths crust. Photo: Shutterstock
2. Temple Mills farming past
Rumour has it that the Temple Mill building was once used as a sheep grazing patch, with grass covering the roof and the sheeps eating keeping the humidity in the flax mill at the right temperature for making fabric. Photo: Stephen Craven (cc-by-sa/2.0)
3. Jimi Hendrixs Leeds visit
Before he made it big, Jimi Hendrix reportedly played in a converted synagogue in Chapel Allerton in 1967 - though the gig was poorly attended. Photo: Evening Standard/Getty Images
4. Buffalo Bills Leeds pub run-in
William F Cody, better known as Buffalo Bill, visited Leeds in 1892 and again in 1903. Legend has it that when he visited the three legs pub he was set upon and beaten up by fellow drinkers. Photo: Hulton Archive/Getty Images
5. The hidden air-raid shelter
Just below the surface of the idyllic Woodhouse Moor, local legend suggests there is an abandoned air raid shelter from World War Two. Photo: MATTHIAS BALK/AFP/Getty Images
6. The Warehouse nightclubs murky origins
The Warehouse was first opened in 1979 and was reportedly founded by former US spy Mike Wiand, who made his money living a James Bond style lifestyle. Photo: Google