In my defence,
I was left unsupervised
Mac Rating: 5.00 | Votes: 1 | Date: 03/07/2026 00:52:00

More than three hundred kinetic light orbs float and dance over the dance floor - a ceiling installation no other club in America runs. District Atlanta at 269 Armour Drive NE opened in 2016 in a converted 11,700-square-foot warehouse in Armour Yards, the industrial pocket between Piedmont Park and Buckhead, directly across the street from SweetWater Brewing Company. The renovation kept the warehouse bones deliberately raw while installing production that outguns rooms twice its size: the signature orb array, permanent laser show, LED walls and a d&b audiotechnik sound system fronted by Pioneer's flagship Tour One CDJs. The two-storey, multi-room layout splits the night across a main-floor dance arena with the DJ altar at its heart and mezzanine levels wrapping above, giving the club a capacity in the several-hundreds that keeps even international headliners feeling like warehouse parties rather than arena shows. The booking has made it Atlanta's techno and house headquarters: Eric Prydz, Charlotte de Witte, Paul van Dyk, Sasha and John Digweed, Black Coffee, Kaskade, Madeon, Gorgon City and Benny Benassi have all played the room, alongside open-format and bass nights that keep the calendar full Thursday through Sunday. The club styles itself the city's go-to good-time destination and backs the claim with oddball bookings - live bands, body-art exhibits, MMA fights and amateur wrestling share the stage with the DJ roster. The Armour Yards location is part of the appeal: an adaptive-reuse district of breweries and studios off I-85 with none of the Buckhead velvet-rope culture, drawing a crowd that chooses nights by lineup. A decade in, District holds its place as the anchor of Atlanta's electronic scene - the warehouse room every touring DJ routes through between Miami and New York, under a ceiling that moves with the music.

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