Mac Rating: 5.00 | Votes: 1 | Date: 03/07/2026 00:33:00
Washington finally got the warehouse club it always envied other cities. BERHTA at 1237 W Street NE, in the industrial Brentwood pocket behind Union Market, is a multi-acre indoor-outdoor music campus billing itself as DC's first high-fidelity venue for concerts, festivals, performing arts and immersive experiences - three distinct rooms under one operation, each with a custom-built, audiophile-grade sound system as the headline attraction. The flagship BERHTA room holds 3,500 on a fully flexible open floor inside a transformative industrial shell: floating floors, double walls and professional blast doors for soundproofing, and a large-format stereo point-source rig running 26 subwoofers and nearly 150 drivers, tuned for warmth and zero ear fatigue at club volume. BETTE, the 850-capacity second room, stacks towering ceilings and projection walls over a four-point, 96kHz system pushing 230,000 peak watts; BANANAS, the 2,000-capacity outdoor yard, runs day-to-night festivals under a horn-loaded stereo rig with a dozen 21-inch subs beneath the DJ booth. The booking matches the hardware - Andy C, Mind Against, Max Cooper's 3D audiovisual show, Mura Masa, Big Gigantic and a steady stream of drum and bass, techno and house institutions. Access is via W Street only, with limited paid parking on site, the Rhode Island Ave-Brentwood Metro a ten-minute walk and Union Station ten minutes by rideshare. The community-driven, festival-scale ethos - VIP tables notwithstanding - has made the campus the anchor of DC's post-club electronic scene almost overnight. The sound-first philosophy extends to details clubs rarely bother with: identical monitoring for DJs and dancefloor, driver counts published like spec sheets, and acoustic treatment that lets three rooms run simultaneously on one campus without bleed. The Union Market district's warehouse stock made the footprint possible - the kind of multi-acre industrial parcel long extinct in Northwest DC - and the venue's arrival has pulled the city's electronic music centre of gravity decisively northeast.
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