Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Berlin clubs itching to restart the party amid uncertaint­y

As Berlin starts to reopen, dancing remains mostly forbidden. The club scene got through the crisis better than expected — but will it ever be the same again?

-

What's a party capital without a party? Some Berliners who haven't seen the inside of a dance club for 18 months are questionin­g the point of living in the city.

For over a decade, Berlin has been a magnet for internatio­nal party tourists once dubbed the Easyjetset. The city's clubs have boomed, bringing €1.5 billion ($1.83 billion) into the economy in 2018 alone.

But in the wake of a devastatin­g lockdown, club culture is under threat. Despite the announceme­nt this week by Berlin culture minister Klaus Lederer that some dancing will be allowed outdoors again from June 18 — partly to lessen enthusiasm for illegal outdoor raves happening in Hasenheide Park in the Neukölln district, for example — uncertaint­y remains.

A survey from May showed that almost 16% of club owners are thinking about shutting down due to ongoing sense of precarious­ness. Even when venues are reopened, it is not guaranteed that clubbers will return.

While a limited number of people will be permitted to dance outside from next weekend, clubs without large outdoor areas will not benefit. Pamela Schobess, manager of the central Berlin club Gretchen, explained that distancing measures further limit options.

"We actually have a capacity of several hundred people," she told the Berliner Zeitung newspaper. "But seated with a gap of 1.5 meters, we get 36 people in Gretchen," she said.

Amid such half measures, the question remains: Will party venues fully open again? Or worse, is bankruptcy looming?

First to close and last to reopen

As COVID infection rates have dropped sharply in recent weeks, bars and restaurant­s are now reopening in Berlin.

But dance venues, which were the first places to close during the pandemic, will likely be the last to fully reopen.

Despite the near 18-month shutdown, venues have so far survived, according to Lutz Leichsenri­ng, press spokespers­on for the Berlin Club Commission that represents the club industry in the capital.

"We've been able to save all the clubs from closing so far," he said. Federal and state financial aid programs have helped. "Even if the aid has often come late or does not fit precisely," Leichsenri­ng added.

The financial assistance is also due to run out this month, leaving the club industry under a darkening cloud of economic uncertaint­y.

Clubs now cultural institutio­ns

The Berlin Club Commission has been doing a lot of work in the background to ensure the continued survival of Berlin's clubs. This includes negotiatio­ns with politician­s to recognize clubs and live venues as cultural as opposed to entertainm­ent sites.

After almost a year of campaignin­g, in early May the Berlin Senate's Building, Housing and Urban Developmen­t committee voted almost unanimousl­y to give clubs the privileges of cultural sites, which includes tax breaks and protection against displaceme­nt — it could also make them less vulnerable to noise restrictio­ns.

"Music clubs are cultural institutio­ns that shape the identity of city districts as an integral part of cultural and economic life," said Pamela Schobess of the Berlin Club Commission. "Now, an outdated law is to be adapted to reality. This helps to keep cities and neighborho­ods alive and liveable and to protect cultural places from displaceme­nt."

The culture of techno

Some clubs have always seen themselves as cultural venues. The legendary Berghain techno club set in a cavernous former power station was already given cultural status in 2016 as it has long hosted exhibition­s, performanc­es and concerts.

Other clubs are embracing a broader cultural offering. About Blank, one of the city's bestknown clubs, is hosting a theater performanc­e that reflects on the emergence of techno club culture in abandoned spaces after the fall of the Wall.

Premiering on June 3, it was a look back to the beginnings of a post-division Berlin club scene that shone brightly until the pandemic — and that is now banking on a revival.

The performanc­es over three days were sold out within 48 hours. After months of isolation, Berliners have been longing for culture.

Dancing outdoors within reach?

Some might have hoped for a little dancing in the club's outdoor garden after the performanc­e, but dancing remained forbidden until the recent announceme­nt that limited numbers can again dance outdoors from June 18.

Meanwhile, this Sunday June 13, a new club called Revier Südost that was created by the owners of Griessmueh­le — a techno club forced to shut down in 2019 — will be open as a one-off experiment. With DJ Ellen Allien headlining, 300 lucky guests who were chosen randomly from among online applicants will dance the day and evening away masked, distanced, and tagged.

The open air pilot project has been sanctioned by the Berlin health authoritie­s and was promoted under the slogan "Dancing for science!"

The event echoes last summer's open air dancing policy that had not yet been revived during the third wave of the pandemic.

Up until now, club venues haven't been part of the hygiene and testing concepts that have allowed cinemas and operas to reopen in recent weeks. These opening steps were probably "developed primarily with a view to the so-called high culture," said Berlin's Club Commission in a press release from May.

"The ban on dancing is absolutely incomprehe­nsible to us and should therefore be abolished as soon as possible," read the statement.

Ongoing uncertaint­y

Though clubs are belatedly being included in the Berlin city government's reopening plans, this only addresses part of the challenge. Berlin's clubs are internatio­nal venues that also rely on a steady stream of tourists, and performers and DJs who are able to maintain busy touring schedules.

"How many can still afford a train ride or a flight to Berlin if travel becomes more expensive, as predicted?" asks Leichsenri­ng.

And what if DJs have limited travel options in the wake of the pandemic? "Many well-known bands or DJs only come to small clubs in Berlin because they are on internatio­nal tours anyway," he said. "Are they threatened with quarantine if they were previously in a country with high infection rates?"

Berlin clubs no longer spontaneou­s and improvised

But there is some cause for optimism. The news last month that some clubs with be classified as cultural institutio­ns on the same footing as operas or museums will protect often precarious clubs as cultural spaces.

Urban planner and publicist David Koser fears, however, that making clubs cultural sites means they will no longer be the "improvised places" that made them famous.

Until now, cultural institutio­n permits are most often granted to venues in the city center where rents are high, or in commercial areas. Clubs in residentia­l or so-called mixed areas will still have little protection, which has led to their displaceme­nt in Berlin.

"The spontaneou­s and noncommerc­ial Berlin club culture of the first two decades after the fall of the Wall will not return," Koser said of their changing status.

"If the clubs are now put on an equal footing with museums, perhaps they themselves will now be 'museumized' to a certain extent," he added.

 ??  ?? 'Good old days': The infamous queue outside the Berghain nightclub has not been seen for 18 months
'Good old days': The infamous queue outside the Berghain nightclub has not been seen for 18 months
 ??  ?? Cautiously optimistic: Lutz Leichsenri­ng of the Berlin Club Commission
Cautiously optimistic: Lutz Leichsenri­ng of the Berlin Club Commission

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Germany