Old gasworks buildings converted into shops, eateries, bars, workshops, plus park & festivals.
Item
Now permanently closed.
Formerly the Time, just the name is changed. Closed Mondays, Reggae night is Tuesday, Wednesday’s Fusion, numerous DJ’s keep the scene always interesting at this long-time Amsterdam favourite. What a convenient location, right there in the middle of it all! Have a groovy Time, or Item, or whatever.
Niuewezijdes Voorburgwal 163/5
Amsterdam
Phone:
Supper Club: Lounge
The more I hear about this place the less desire I have to go there. Everyone says it’s THE place for rich and snobby people who will glare at you with open hostility if you aren’t wearing the latest designer fashions. Stories circulate about items being pilfered from their coatcheck and unsympathetic management whose only concern seems to be gouging large amounts of guilders from your pocket.
Guests lounge in beds & order food & drinks at this eatery, bar & performance space.
If you are looking for attitude, here it is!
Panama
Hip, trendy, the latest expensive place where you MUST be seen. Cafe-restaurant serves tasty tidbits, the dance studio is happening and the theatre-nightclub has a swanky champagne bar. Located out in the northeast part of Amsterdam facing Hei Ij and Ijhaven, near the cruise ship passenger terminal. Web site offers lots of flash and animation, as well as more info.
NL Nieuwezijds Lounge B.V.
Free entry lounge with chilled-out music for a relaxing visit.
Chin Chin Club
Chin Chin Club is our interpretation of a social clubhouse.
A total concept that houses a restaurant, three bars,
private karaoke rooms and a nightclub.
Korsakoff
Now permanently closed…
Grungy club with hip-hop, metal and alternative music. Free entrance, open 7 days. Recently reopened. In the middle of everything off the Leidseplein, on the same street as the Melkweg.
Lijnbansgracht 161
Amsterdam
Phone: 020-625-7854
Hotel Arena
Former convent, now a hip hotel and nightclub. Happy DJ scene on weekends in the club, and special events occasionally.
AFAS Live
Once known as the Heineken Music Hall.I finally got to check this place out for a jazz concert. I was expecting a sophisticated venue with comfortable seating and good acoustics. What I found was something else…
My first icky, sticky step into the auditorium was a forerunner of things to come. Rather than having the seats out on the floor, they had chosen to clear the floor, no doubt to pack more people into the hall, to make more money.
Before the concert started, the seats in the remaining stands in the back were already completely full. So we had no choice but to stand on the rubberized floor for the entire concert. This wouldn’t be so bad I guess, despite paying 30 Euros apiece, but unfortunately the floor was nothing more than a pool of beer, or rather beer from the last concert, drying and sticking to everything. It seems rather than actually cleaning the floor, the beer just gets pushed around so it dries more evenly. The last thing you would want to do is try to sit on this floor. You might never get up!
Still the concert had not even begun, and I was already having doubts about this venue. At last the band came out, and much to their credit, they were excellent. I could almost forget about the floor, and the beer… But then we tried moving around as our view wasn’t great. Next thing I know I’m standing in a huge puddle of beer. In fact by the middle of the concert, the puddles were everywhere. Not to mention the plastic beer cups being underfoot. I remember one really soft passage of music, where the artist was doing a very moving solo…you could almost hear a pin drop, then CRUNCH! Another plastic cup solo as counterpoint.
Yup, a real sophisticated venue! I spent almost as much time checking out what was going on underfoot as I did paying attention to the music! Now I know why they call it the “Heineken” Music Hall… Just one visit and you’re wearing “Heineken” all over your shoes.
I’m truly impressed with the wide range of music and the sheer quantity available in Amsterdam. But the venues in this town REALLY SUCK! I think the powers that grant these venues licenses really need to get out and experience the way other cities host events.
I’m tired of being smoked out, pushed around, caught in endless queues, stuck behind 8 ft tall Dutchmen, unable to see anything! Then to have trash piled up around my feet, beer soaking into my shoes, incessant chatter drowning out the music, and to PAY good money for all this “pleasure”… FUCK IT!
I may just give up on live music altogether, or go to a more “civilized” place to find real culture… If you don’t mind being treated like another piece of trash on the floor, then this is the venue for you… It’s really too bad, because this venue books some of the more popular acts that come to Amsterdam. While hard core punks & clubbers might willing to put up with this shit, jazz enthusiasts like me will just have to go elsewhere for entertainment. Why must every venue suffer from the club scene mentality?
I’m surprised the architect didn’t just draw a huge beer can. It would’ve been much more appropriate.
AFAS Live is just south of Amsterdam near the Arena. With an advertised 5,500 “seats” (if you’re lucky, otherwise it’s only about 1,200 seats or the beer swamp – bring your clogs!) it’s bigger than any hall in Amsterdam, and the acoustics are good, but not great. If there were some other redeeming features to this place, I’m sorry, but they got drowned out by Heineken beer…
Paradiso
This is one of the most popular venues in Amsterdam. A converted church now serves a more eclectic congregation of ravers, jazz freaks, rock fans, performance artists and more. The main hall has a great dance floor and balcony. Other halls in the basement and top floor host djs and jam sessions into the morning hours. A monthly membership fee is added to tickets, which are usually very reasonably priced.