As we mentioned in our last post where Munich prepares to say goodbye to one of its most cherished dance floors with the upcoming closure of BLITZ, Berlin is, unsurprisingly, doing what Berlin does best: opening a new club. And not quietly, either.
Enter AMT, a new venue set to open in the heart of Berlin at Alexanderplatz. Housed inside a former casino at Dircksenstraße 114, AMT sits tucked beneath the city’s iconic S-Bahn arches, directly below a late-night convenience store; a very Berlin sentence, if ever there was one. If BLITZ felt like a purpose-built temple of dance, AMT leans into something a little grittier and more improvised, drawing energy from its surroundings rather than polishing them away.
The club will hold up to 1,000 people and is spread across two floors, giving it room to shift moods as the night unfolds. Alongside the main dance spaces, AMT will include a darkroom and a dedicated chill-out area; a nod to Berlin’s long-standing commitment to nightlife that accommodates both intensity and escape. It’s a layout that suggests long nights, wandering conversations, and the kind of clubbing experience that doesn’t rush you out the door.
Sound, naturally, is being taken very seriously. AMT will feature a bespoke system from Kirsch Audio, custom-designed by sound engineer Willsingh Wilson of Wax Acoustics. It’s the kind of detail that places AMT firmly in the lineage of clubs that understand one essential truth: great nights are built on great sound. In the wake of BLITZ’s reputation for pristine acoustics and careful design, AMT’s sonic ambitions feel like a continuation of that same philosophy, just translated into Berlin’s language.
The project comes from Robert Havemann, previously known for founding the Neukölln bar Velvet. While line-ups for AMT haven’t yet been announced, the focus so far suggests a club defined more by atmosphere and intention than hype — a space that wants to earn its reputation over time rather than launch with fireworks.
With BLITZ closing its doors in Munich and AMT preparing to open in Berlin, the contrast feels telling. One era gently winding down, another quietly gearing up. Nightlife, like the music it’s built around, never really disappears — it just moves, reshapes itself, and finds new rooms to fill. And if history has taught us anything, it’s that somewhere under an S-Bahn arch is often exactly where the next chapter begins.
