Deeper Dive: Where the Dog is Buried in the Brooklyn Mirage Case
By the time most New Yorkers heard the word “bankruptcy,” the real work on Brooklyn Mirage was already done. The dog had been buried years earlier–under term sheets, political favors, and construction shortcuts that never cleared daylight.
Pacha New York: What the Press Release Won’t Say Out Loud
Pacha’s return is backed by a Dubai luxury group with a 460 million dollar credit line, hundreds of millions in hotel revenue, and global expansion plans—not a mom‑and‑pop club rescue for Brooklyn’s once largest independent venue, while bankruptcy language and unpaid claims trail behind.
Brooklyn Mirage’s Chapter 11: What’s in the Committee’s 14-Point Objection
On January 27, 2026, the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors filed a statement withdrawing its support for the plan. The document was surgical and quite frankly, very ‘techno’ in spirit. Point by point, the committee laid out how Axar had:…
What’s Next, Brooklyn Mirage?
In an industrial stretch of East Williamsburg, Avant Gardner emerged in 2017 under the vision of Jürgen “Billy” Bildstein. What began as a fleeting pop-up concept found permanence with the opening of the Brooklyn Mirage - a sprawling outdoor venue whose ambitious production and scale set it apart from the outset. Over the next two years, additional halls rose beside it: The Great Hall, cavernous and versatile, and Kings Hall, intimate and subterranean. Together, the complex offered a new blueprint for year-round nightlife. But the by early 2025 the venue saw its first needles in coffin and by August 4, Avant Gardner, LLC (“Avant Gardner”), the operator of Brooklyn Mirage, together with its affiliated entities filed for bankruptcy.