ADE Launches Mini-Documentary Series With Spotlight On Gashouder
As part of its 30th anniversary celebrations, Amsterdam Dance Event (ADE) has launched a new editorial series exploring the venues that helped shape Amsterdam’s electronic music culture. The first installment of 30 YEARS ADE: Iconic Venues shines a spotlight on Gashouder, one of the city’s most legendary electronic music destinations, as it prepares to enter a new chapter following an extensive renovation project.
Rather than focusing on artists and lineups, the series looks at the spaces that have served as the foundation of Amsterdam’s nightlife and electronic music scene for decades. According to ADE, the goal is to explore venues not simply as event backdrops, but as places where memories, communities, and musical movements have evolved over time alongside the city itself.
For many electronic music fans, few venues carry as much significance as Gashouder. The iconic circular structure has hosted landmark concerts, large-scale club nights, and some of ADE’s most memorable events throughout the years. The venue’s longstanding relationship with Awakenings helped establish it as one of the most recognizable spaces in global techno culture, welcoming generations of clubbers through its industrial doors.
The feature arrives at a pivotal moment for the venue. After undergoing approximately two years of structural renovations, Gashouder is preparing to reopen with a pre-opening season beginning this month before officially reopening in November. The renovation includes major acoustic improvements, an entirely new underground level housing artist facilities, lockers, and visitor amenities, as well as updates designed to create new possibilities for staging and performance while preserving the venue’s historic industrial character.

Speaking throughout the feature, members of the new Gashouder team emphasize the importance of balancing modernization with preservation. The venue’s leadership repeatedly refers to Gashouder’s “collective memory,” highlighting how generations of attendees have built emotional connections to the space over the past several decades.
Originally constructed in 1902 as part of Amsterdam’s Westergasfabriek industrial complex, Gashouder gradually transformed from gas infrastructure into one of the city’s most celebrated cultural landmarks. Today, the venue is positioning itself not only as a destination for electronic music, but also as a multidisciplinary space for live music, art, and performance.
The timing is especially significant as Gashouder prepares to play a major role during ADE 2026. Several events have already been announced for the venue, including performances from Armin van Buuren, Job Jobse, Josh Baker, Sammy Virji, Franky Rizardo, Mochakk, and a collaborative event curated by I Hate Models and Nico Moreno.
As ADE celebrates three decades of electronic music culture, 30 YEARS ADE: Iconic Venues offers a reminder that the story of dance music is not only told through the artists on stage, but also through the spaces that have brought communities together year after year. If the first installment is any indication, the series will provide a fascinating look at the venues that helped define both Amsterdam nightlife and global electronic music culture.
