Brussels is losing one of its most recognisable nightlife rooms. After more than 16 years, Spirito — the club installed in a former Anglican church on Rue de Stassart in Ixelles — is closing its doors as a nightclub, ending a run that helped define a certain glamorous, late-night side of the city.
The final night is billed as “The Last Dance”, with doors opening at 22:00 and the event framed as one last chance to “feel, dance, and make history” together. Tickets are still available via Xceed, and the venue says a few tables remain for those wanting to be there for the last call.

A church turned club
Part of Spirito’s mystique came from its setting: a deconsecrated church transformed into a nightclub, where vaulted architecture and velvet nightlife collided. That contrast helped make the venue feel singular in Brussels, a place where the city’s appetite for spectacle and excess found a dramatic home.
According to the owner, the closure is also tied to the wider reality of Brussels nightlife, which he described as too difficult and risky to keep investing in as a club format. The site will be “reimagined” after the closure, with other possible uses mentioned, but not as a discotheque.

Why this closure matters
Spirito’s end is not just the disappearance of another venue; it marks the closing of a specific nightlife fantasy that Brussels has hosted for years. More than 1.2 million visitors reportedly passed through its doors over the years, which gives the closure a real sense of scale.
That is part of why the final night feels symbolic. Spirito was never a small underground room; it was a statement venue, one that mixed celebration, fashion, status and nightlife theatre in a way few places can sustain for long. Its closure says as much about the changing economics of club culture as it does about one building.

The last dance
The venue and its partners are clearly leaning into the emotional weight of the night, urging people to show up, share the moment and mark the end together. In Brussels, where club spaces often vanish quietly, the idea of a public farewell is already meaningful in itself.
For Ket, Spirito’s closure also reflects a bigger question: what kind of nightlife does Brussels still want to protect? When a place with this much history and symbolism disappears from the club map, the loss is felt far beyond one dancefloor.
Useful links
Le Bonbon Brussels on Spirito’s closure
Xceed tickets for the final night [user-provided]
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