| DJ Sets ::Space in Miami Club Nights
N0.
18 RATED CLUB IN THE WORLD BY
DJ MAG
Space
in Miami Night Club Details...
Space,
34 NE 11th St, Miami,
Florida 33132-1724, USA
The establishing venue of the Downtown
Miami nightlife scene, Space has set the standard for dance
music clubs in the United States. With three rooms equipped
with the latest in sound from Dynacord, as well as state-of-the-art
lighting from Robé and Anolis, this massive venue will
impress even the most jaded dancefloor veteran upon entry.
From the lavishly outfitted downstairs room to the newly-refurbished
loft and the legendary outdoor terrace above, Space has consistently
delivered the defining performers and sounds in the dance
music scene for over nine years, an eternity in the ever-fickle
Miami nightlife scene. Sporting one of the coveted 24-hour
liquor licenses for Downtown Miami, the venue has become 'the'
place for DJs to perform well into the next afternoon, and
on occasion later...
With guest DJs and performers such as Paul Van Dyk, Armin
Van Buuren, Sander Kleinenberg, Roger Sanchez, Eric Prydz,
SOS, Sharam, Pete Tong, Erick Morillo, Boris, Steve Bug, Ferry
Corsten, and many others, Space is no stranger to talent gracing
it's decks. And, as befits the flagship venue of the Miami
scene, the residents are unparalleled, with DJ/Producers Oscar
G, Patrick M, Cedric Gervais, Lazardi, and Louis Puig taking
to the decks on a weekly basis.
Space
Information...
Space Miami, today the name is synonymous
with dance music in the United States. The go-to venue for
any nightlife enthusiast in the nation, the club is proudly
marching on into it's second decade of operation.
Enter Louis Puig. As of the late 1990s,
this former DJ-turned-nightclub impresario had already owned
a few successful nightclubs in the South Florida area. However,
for his next project, he wanted to break from the commercial
feel of his previous ventures and embark on something new.
Ever the risk-taker, Puig embraced the challenge and began
construction of a new multi-room megaclub at 142 NE 11th Street,
to be named Club Space.
Inhabiting a "fixer-upper" of a sprawling one-story
warehouse just off of Biscayne Boulevard, the original Club
Space was a serious gamble on the part of Puig. With a concentrated
marketing push emphasizing an egalitarian, no-nonsense approach
towards the customers, as well as the then-unheard of 24-hour
operating permit, Club Space promised an exciting, over-the-top
club experience for the discerning dance music enthusiast.
With state-of-the-art lighting, sound, and visual systems,
the venue rapidly set "the" standard for clubs not
only in the Miami area, but throughout the country.
With original residents such as legendary DJ/Producer Oscar
G, trance maven Edgar V, house stalwart Roland, and local
favorite Ivano Bellini, the gauntlet had been thrown down.
Coupled with a sudden influx of guest DJs such as Paul Van
Dyk, Paul Oakenfold, John Digweed, Sasha, Deep Dish, Danny
Tenaglia (who played a record 20-hour set during the 2000
WMC), and a then-unknown Dutch fellow named Tiësto, the
nightlife landscape of the area, and the nation as a whole
had been shaken up.
Guest DJs of course took note of this phenomena, and these
former main room denizens soon were requesting to work their
magic on the outdoors. Closing times of 2 PM rapidly became
the norm.
After a bittersweet farewell to the old building in early
2003, the Space crew moved into their new digs with a vengeance.
Like the predecessor, the new Space took up residence in a
vintage warehouse. Unlike the previous facility, the new building
was a multi-story monster, complete with an outdoor rooftop
terrace to take the place of the legendary patio from the
old building. Redefining the term "superclub", the
new Space had vastly increased it's capacity, bringing in
record crowds for such DJs as Danny Tenaglia, Erick Morillo,
Steve Lawler, Deep Dish, Paul Van Dyk, John Digweed, Sasha,
Tiësto, as well as then-rising stars such as James Zabiela,
Nic Fanciulli, Sander Kleinenberg, Danny Howells, and numerous
other talents. Drawn to it's even more amazing technical sophistication,
the new "Space 34", had become the stop in Miami
for every DJ of note.
Soon, Space began to receive numerous media accolades and
awards from the local government for "making" Downtown.
Some pundits went even as far to suggest that NE 11th Street
be named "Louis Puig Boulevard".
With no signs of slowing, Space progressed througout the
first decade of the 21st century, consistently bringing in
the top dance talent from throughout the world. Sets of ten
hours or more became the norm for guest DJs, with talent like
Deep Dish, Behrouz, Sander Kleinenberg, Erick Morillo, David
Guetta, Eric Prydz, Victor Calderone, Mark Knight, Boris,
Desyn Masiello, as well as new residents Cedric Gervais, Patrick
M, and Lazardi easily playing into the afternoon hours.
This current year, 2010, sees Space celebrating a decade
in the business. With most venues in South Florida perishing
after a mere season of operation (the dreaded "infant
mortality"), the fact that Space has existed for ten
years is regarded as a miracle. Not content to rest their
laurels, Puig and the Space team have taken the club to the
next level, regarding Space as more than just a club, but
as a brand, establishing touring events, pool parties, music
releases, and more, as befits a venue regarded by the international
dance music press as the top in the United States.
Rushing into it's second decade of existence, even the founders
of Space have sat back in amazement at the creation they've
wrought. One can only speculate what will happen next...
DJ Mag Club Review...
No relation to its Ibiza namesake, Space Miami is every bit
as central to Miami's club scene as the Playa d'en Bossa superclub
is to the White Isle. Located downtown on 34 NE 11th Street,
Space Miami shares the same legendary history of terrace raving
too.
But there is one crucial difference. Whilst the terrace
at Ibiza's Space has long been covered (and more recently
thumped with Draconian licensing restrictions), the Miami
experience continues uncovered and unrestricted to this day.
As Toolroom's Mark Knight states: "There aren't many
clubs left in the world where you can start playing at 6am
and finish at 4pm, let alone in the sunshine."
And it is that unbeatable feeling of dancing outdoors amongst
the palm fronds, looking out across the backdrop of Miami's
iconic skyline, that makes Space Miami the clubbing experience
it is.
"The Space terrace is the best dancefloor in the world,"
believes Desyn Masiello from SOS. "It's been going on
'til the sunshine hours of Sunday afternoon every weekend
for the past 10 years.
"The Dynacore soundsystem there is as good as it gets,
the owner of the club is also an expert in sound and lighting
and ensures it is always perfectly tuned... playing or dancing
there in the daylight just cannot be beaten."
It's high praise indeed but to lay all the credit for Space's
magic on the terrace alone would be an injustice on the heritage
of the Miami house scene.
For it is in the steaming hedonistic abyss of the dark Space
main room where the legendary Oscar G has embarked on his
famed 10-hour marathons of dark grooves, tribal funk and insistent
basslines since joining as resident back in 2001. One half
of seminal production outfits Murk, The Funky Green Dogs and
Liberty City, Oscar goes down in the books as one of the architects
of what was once so renowned as the 'Miami sound'. To this
day, he remains a vital institution at the club. At least
twice a month, Oscar can be found leading Space's main room
on a journey through funk and bass.
Of equal legend, though, are the many WMC marathons that
Danny Tenaglia has taken the Space main room on - classic
nights that turned into lost days they remain renowned as
the ultimate Tenaglia experience, a clubbing medal that many
talk about but few can claim to properly own.
Big hitting guests like Steve Lawler, Nic Fanciulli and
Mark Knight have also all appeared.