The Cherries Are Back: Inside Pacha New York’s Three-Night Brooklyn Arrival

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Solomun, Michael Bibi, and Black Coffee christen the Ibiza institution’s first permanent North American home.

You feel the cherries before you see them. Walking into the old Brooklyn Mirage footprint on opening night, the first thing that registers isn’t the lineup or the guest list: it’s the space.

The clutter of the venue’s last, doomed renovation is gone. In its place: a wide-open, sky-framed dancefloor built for movement, a sound rig dialed in for the long haul, and those two red cherries hanging over everything like a homecoming New York had been waiting a decade for.

This past weekend, Pacha New York officially opened its doors with landmark sets from Solomun, Michael Bibi, and Black Coffee, pulling thousands of people to East Williamsburg for the arrival of one of nightlife’s most iconic global brands. More than a decade since Pacha closed its doors, its Brooklyn re-imaginging lands as a genuine inflection point for dance music in the city and its dancefloor-first philosophy that’s defined the brand since the beginning.

A homecoming a decade in the making

This isn’t Pacha’s first New York love affair. The brand spent roughly a decade in Hell’s Kitchen; a multi-level West 46th Street temple on hallowed ground that once housed Sound Factory and Twilo. Ten years later, they’re back, this time across the river at 140 Stewart Avenue, the open-air complex most of us knew as the Brooklyn Mirage.

The path here was anything but smooth. The Mirage spent 2025 dark, tangled in permit problems and the Chapter 11 bankruptcy of its former parent, Avant Gardner — after a massive renovation failed to clear inspection. Dubai-based hospitality group FIVE Holdings, which owns the Pacha Group, stepped in alongside Axar Capital to take over operations, gut the space, and rebuild it from the studs through the winter. The result is a redrawn open-air dancefloor that capacity caps for crowd flow rather than cramming people in like sardines, plus The Great Hall, a 2,500-cap indoor room engineered to run year-round as a multi-genre venue once the summer season winds down.

On Friday: Solomun broke his own rule

Solomun

The whole weekend hinged on a promise Solomun made to himself and then broke on purpose.

For more than a decade, the Diynamic boss has held a personal rule: no shows outside Europe in the dead center of Ibiza season. His calendar is sacred in those months; he was literally bookended by +1 dates back at his Pacha Ibiza residency. But after his rain-soaked debut at the Fulton Fish Market in May and the surprise five-hour Knockdown Center afterparty that followed when the crowd showed up in droves with almost no notice something made his change his mind. At least when it comes to his New York fans.

In his announcement, he framed it as a question he couldn’t shake: who was he to stay in his comfort zone when all of those people had left theirs for him? So he stepped out, flew over mid-season, and opened Pacha.

Thousands packed in under the cherries to watch the venue’s first official chapter get written in real time, and Solomun, reading the moment, gave them the kind of patient, hypnotic, hands-in-the-air arc that built his legend in the first place. If there were any nerves about whether a feeling this specific could be rebuilt in a new borough, they evaporated somewhere in the first hour.

Next up, Saturday: Michael Bibi takes the floor

Night two belonged to Michael Bibi, and the Solid Grooves founder wasted exactly zero time claiming it. He opened his sold-out set with a booming “Go NY!” flip. From there it was pure Bibi: that infectious, groove-driven house stretched into the marathon format the new room was practically built for. Wall-to-wall, deep into the night, it quickly became one of the weekend’s defining moments.

Sunday Send Off: Black Coffee closes it out

If anyone could land the plane on a weekend this serious, it’s Black Coffee closing out the inaugural run Sunday with yet another sold-out show. He great won’t be a stranger to Stewart Avenue, either. he’s already booked to return on July 5, September 6, and October 17, effectively making himself a season-long fixture of the Pacha New York calendar.

Ten years is a long time to wonder whether a feeling can be re-captured.

After this weekend, the answer feels obvious: the cherries are home, and Brooklyn just got its summer back.

Tickets and VIP reservations for Pacha New York 2026 are available now at pacha-nyc.com.

DateEvent
Fri, June 26Masters at Work with Louie Vega and Kenny Dope
Sat, June 27Guapo NYC at Planet Pride — Brooklyn Hall
Sat, June 27Planet Pride
Fri, July 3Vintage Culture
Sat, July 4Gud Vibrations with SLANDER & NGHTMRE
Sun, July 5Black Coffee
Fri, July 10ANOTR
Sat, July 11ANOTR — SOLD OUT
Fri, July 17elrow
Sat, July 18elrow
Fri, July 24BUNT.
Fri, July 31ARTBAT
Fri, Aug 1Rave The World with ALOK
Sat, Aug 15Lost Frequencies
Fri, Aug 21Loco Dice, Seth Troxler, Victor Calderone — ALL NIGHT LONG
Sat, Aug 29FLOW with Franky Rizardo
Fri, Sept 4GORDO
Sun, Sept 6Black Coffee
Fri, Sept 11ZHU
Fri, Sept 18Indo Warehouse Presents SPICE TRADE
Fri, Sept 25Sonny Fodera
Sat, Sept 26BLOND:ISH
Sat, Oct 17Black Coffee
Fri, Nov 13Miss Monique Presents BIORHYTHM
Sat, Nov 14Madeon — Brooklyn Hall
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