
Brooklyn Storehouse, the cavernous warehouse-turned dance venue tucked inside Building 293 at the Brooklyn Navy Yard, is calling it quits this fall after just over two years of parties. Launched in mid-2024 as a massive cultural playground, the space quickly became a must-stop for big-name electronic acts. Organizers say the run will end with a Halloween-weekend sendoff, following one last packed summer of shows.
Venue representatives told Billboard that the tenancy "was always time-limited" and that the Brooklyn Navy Yard Development Corporation has confirmed plans to convert the building for climate infrastructure and clean-energy uses, as reported by Beatportal. Promoters have described Storehouse as a "meanwhile" activation, essentially a creative reuse of leftover industrial space while the yard locked in long-term plans. They say they are proud of what they pulled off and that final dates, including the Halloween closing event, will land soon.
Why the Navy Yard Is Reclaiming the Site
Brooklyn Storehouse says the Brooklyn Navy Yard has greenlit redevelopment plans that will shift the building to climate and clean-energy infrastructure, a move the venue frames as very much in line with the Yard’s broader mission of industrial conversion, according to reporting by K-Jewel 99.3 FM. That direction tracks with citywide efforts to plant resilient infrastructure on waterfront industrial land. Organizers say the temporary arts experiment gave promoters a chance to stress-test giant shows in the space while the yard weighed permanent uses.
A Short but Heavy-Hitting Run
For a venue with a brief life, Storehouse punched above its weight, hosting marquee electronic artists and large-scale productions that needed a footprint almost no one else in the city could offer. Sales materials list the main space at about 104,000 square feet with capacity in the multiple thousands, according to Brooklyn Storehouse. That size made it a natural magnet not just for concerts, but also for splashy brand activations and film shoots.
Promoters and the Public Legal Row
The project launched as a joint effort between promoters TCE Presents, parent company of Teksupport, and U.K. live-events outfit Broadwick Live, according to industry coverage. The closure announcement lands in the middle of an ongoing dispute between TCE co-founders, with one court filing alleging the other shared unauthorized information about Storehouse in legal documents, per K-Jewel 99.3 FM. Promoters say the current summer schedule is still a go while they lock in the final stretch of programming.
What Fans Should Know
Shows already on sale are expected to roll ahead as planned, and ticket holders are being told to check directly with their vendor for any refund or reschedule details. The venue’s public calendar for the last months includes sets from Beltran, Max Dean b2b Luke Dean, Black Tiger Sex Machine and Four Tet, per reporting by Beatportal, with tickets listed on major platforms such as Ticketmaster. For New Yorkers who rely on large-capacity weekend rooms, losing a 104,000-square-foot dance floor will tighten the options for major electronic productions this winter and beyond.
Storehouse representatives have thanked fans and the wider production community for the last two seasons and say they are working with the yard on a careful wind-down of operations. Promoters expect to drop more details on the Halloween finale in the coming weeks and are urging anyone with questions to watch official channels for updates.









