What It Was Like to DJ Pacha New York’s Opening Weekend
Last weekend, the latest addition to New York’s nightlife resurgence opened its doors. Pacha New York officially began its latest era with its new venue in Bushwick, starting with a sold-out weekend led by Michael Bibi and Black Coffee. For a global nightlife brand that has served as shorthand for Ibiza club culture for more than five decades, the opening was a test of whether one of dance music’s most recognizable names could translate its global mythology into a city like New York.
For Bibi, who headlined the venue’s Saturday opening-weekend party on June 20, the moment landed with real weight. “Pacha is one of those brands that’s woven into the history of dance music, so to be there as it opened its doors in New York felt very special,” he says. “I could feel the excitement from the crowd from the moment we walked into the venue. We had also just flown directly in from Barcelona, so the adrenaline was running high.”
The weekend followed a pair of pre-opening celebrations from Rampa’s UNLOCKED and UNBLOCKED series on June 13 and 14, before Pacha moved into its official grand-opening run. Bibi’s Saturday show featured support from Skream and FLETCH, while South African house music mainstay Black Coffee took over Sunday with Shimza and Samm. By the time the weekend arrived, both shows were sold out, giving the venue a high-stakes introduction to a New York scene that has no shortage of history or opinions.
Pacha’s arrival in Brooklyn also comes with a public-facing investment plan. Ahead of opening, the venue announced $24 million in operational enhancements over the next decade, along with $3 million dedicated to Brooklyn-based community initiatives. The plan includes free shuttle transportation to key transit hubs across the city, expanded sanitation services, advanced security infrastructure, and dedicated community outreach through a hotline and email address. In announcing the plan, Pacha framed the Brooklyn opening as a long-term commitment to the borough rather than a seasonal splash.
That sense of commitment to the city is part of what made the night feel personal for Bibi. “I remember going to Pacha first when I was a kid in Ibiza on vacation to watch my favourite artists,” he says. “To me it has always stood for club culture. It’s one of the few names that’s managed to stay iconic for decades. Growing up in this scene, it’s a place you always look at with a certain respect.”

Michael Bibi
Leyda Luz for Rolling Stone
Still, opening a Pacha in New York in 2026 means entering a very different dance-music landscape than the one that shaped the brand in the Seventies, or even the one that turned Ibiza into a pilgrimage site for DJs and club kids. Electronic music is now more visible, more global, and more instantly networked than ever. Tracks can travel from a small scene to a festival main stage almost overnight. DJs operate as touring artists, content creators, label heads, and brands all at once.
“Everything moves a lot faster now,” Bibi says. “Music travels instantly, scenes connect quicker, and there’s more attention on us than ever before. But at its core, the reason people come together hasn’t changed. I think they’re looking for that feeling of connection you only get on a dancefloor.”
That connection was the promise of opening weekend. Pacha may have arrived with the force of an international nightlife machine behind it, but a club night still lives or dies in the space between the DJ and the crowd. “For me, it’s always about the music and the people,” Bibi says. “When the crowd is completely locked in with the DJ and everyone is sharing the same moment, that’s when the magic happens. You can’t manufacture that. That’s what keeps all of us coming back.”

Leyda Luz for Rolling Stone
New York, naturally, made him work for it. “New York has a certain edge to it,” he says. “The people are passionate, they’re knowledgeable, and they don’t give you anything for free. When they’re with you, you feel it immediately. It’s a special thing.”
For Bibi, the night also arrived after a period that has shifted the way he thinks about performing. “I’ve definitely become more present,” he says. “There was a period where simply being able to play again felt uncertain, so every set means something to me now. I try to enjoy every second of it and really connect with the people in front of me because that’s what it’s all about.”
After New York, Bibi says he is back in the studio finishing new music he hopes to release in the coming months. He’s also preparing for a run of major summer shows in Europe, including a London date in August and a OneLife São Paulo event in November. Pacha New York, meanwhile, begins its own long run, betting that a historic nightlife name can still feel fresh in a city that tends to distrust easy nostalgia.
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