B 018

B 018, also pronounced in French, B Dix-Huit, is a nightclub in the semi-industrial, Quarantaine neighborhood of Beirut, Lebanon.

Back in the 1980s while Lebanon was still amidst war, Naji Gebran believed in music as therapy to ease the stress of the war.[1] He started organizing parties, under the name Musical Therapy, at his chalet.[2] According to Bethan Ryder in his book, Bar and Club, parties were later code-named B 018 due to the chalet's location 18 kilometers north of Beirut.[2] Others have attributed the name, B 018, to the security, access-code number of the chalet.[3] Another urban legend claimed that the number or the address of the chalet was B 018.[4] In any case, the parties became so popular and overcrowded that in 1993, Naji moved them to a warehouse in an industrial area of Sin El Fil. The club was then officially Christened B 018.

In 1998, Bernard Khoury was hired to build a new home for B 018 at the Quarantaine,[1] the neighborhood that witnessed some of the most horrific atrocities during the war.[5] The plot of land where the club was built was believed to be the site of the former Palestinian camp.[6] In his design, Khoury wanted to arouse bottled-up remembrances of the war and that was expressed in the club itself, which was sunk in the ground like a communal grave, and seats inside were shaped like coffins.[7] The design of B 018 has been labeled as "war architecture".[8] The design included a circular iron plate that could be moved to cover the entire hypogeal night club at closing time so that from a bird's-eye view, the club resembled a helicopter landing pad.[9] During operation hours, the same covering plates could be lifted up, transforming the club into an open-air discotheque where revelers on the underground dance floor found themselves suddenly dancing under the starry sky of Beirut and their gyrating movements where reflected on the mirrored surfaces of the plates.[9]

The club is one of Beirut's most popular discothèques. Known for its liberal atmosphere, the club is also popular with gays and lesbians.[10] It is often frequented by international celebrities such as, Naomi Campbell and Dee Dee Bridgewater.[3] Wallpaper magazine chose B018 as one of the best clubs in the world in 2004, 2005, and 2006.[11][12] Local and international DJ's, like Danny Howells and Lee Burridge, have played at the club.

The club was the subject of Bernard Khoury's lecture, "New Wars in Progress" that was given at the University of Michigan's School of Art & Design in 2009.[13]

In Fiction

As I ride to B 018, a stench more putrid than death permeates the night. It tickles my urge for a steak, causes my appetite to ache. B 018 is an industrial dance club tucked in a deserted district called The Quarantine.

External links

See also

References

  1. 1 2 BO18, Beirut Night Life, Beirut night clubs, lebanon night clubs, night clubs in beirut
  2. 1 2 Ryder, Bethan. Bar and Club126, page
  3. 1 2 Le Petit Futé Liban, page 127
  4. World Press Review: Volume 50, 2003
  5. Bernard Khoury / DW5
  6. Frem, Sandra. Nahr Beirut : Projections on an Infrastructural Landscape
  7. Kassir, Debevoise, and Fisk. Beirut, page 526
  8. Abitare, Issues 438-439, page 249
  9. 1 2 Baglivo and Galofaro. Digital Odyssey: a New Voyage in the Mediterranean, page 63
  10. Carter, Dunston, and Thomas. Syria and Lebanon, page 289
  11. B018 Series Vol.1 - Mixed By Gunther & Stamina [Ready Mix Records] :: Beatport
  12. ww.worldsbestbars.com/top-100.htm
  13. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BJWoeMTQ6HY&feature=related

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