On 1 and 2 May, Hangar Festival returns to the Quai de Heembeek to celebrate its fifth edition, once again turning the Brussels canal into a raw, open-air playground for electronic music. Set against an industrial backdrop of concrete, water and early spring light, the festival promises a weekend that feels suspended outside everyday time.
This year, Hangar seems to be leaning even harder into what has made the event stand out since the beginning: a precise line-up, immersive staging and a strong sense of atmosphere. The result is less a standard festival than a full-body experience, where every detail is designed to sharpen the feeling of being fully present.

A festival that keeps evolving
For this anniversary edition, Hangar says it is returning to the essentials while expanding the experience. That means a more focused artistic direction, rethought spaces and a new highlight: a fully transformed barge stage, an unexpected setting that should add a dreamlike layer to the weekend.
The festival has always positioned itself as a bridge between international electronic scenes and local energy, and 2026 continues that approach. The line-up brings together established names and rising artists across techno, UK-inspired club sounds and more hybrid electronic forms.
Friday builds the pressure
The first day sets the tone with a powerful, physical energy. Daria Kolosova and Patrick Mason are expected to push the crowd into high-intensity territory, each in their own way. Their presence signals a day built around tension, release and movement.
Elsewhere, Overmono in DJ mode and Mia Koden should bring a more emotional and textural edge, while Oppidan adds sharp UK garage momentum. The Belgian scene is also represented by Emily Jeanne, Jipsey, Arter and Maraschino, reinforcing Hangar’s commitment to local talent.
Saturday opens the horizon
The second day stretches the festival’s palette even further. Avalon Emerson brings a more narrative and sensitive approach, while Ben UFO and Joy Orbison connect garage, bass and club hybridity with effortless authority.
The day also gives space to newer voices and collective energy, with Girls Don’t Sync, Gjin Lipa and Kim Turnbull adding a contemporary, genre-fluid perspective. The festival team has made it clear that showcasing emerging artists remains a priority, alongside its support for Brussels and Belgian club culture.
Why it matters for Brussels
For a queer audience, Hangar’s appeal goes beyond the names on the bill. The festival offers a rare combination of openness, urban scale and sensory immersion, creating a space where the dancefloor feels communal rather than exclusive. That matters in a city where electronic music increasingly overlaps with queer, feminist and underground cultures.

The canal setting also gives the festival a particular kind of romance: industrial but soft at the edges, raw but festive, grounded in the city while still feeling a little removed from it. It is exactly the kind of environment where Brussels’ club energy can feel both local and expansive.

Practical information
Hangar Festival takes place on 1 and 2 May 2026 at Quai de Heembeek, Brussels. Tickets and information are available via the festival’s official website.
KET Magazine is a community‑driven, non‑profit magazine run by volunteers based in Brussels. Get in touch to share your thoughts or tell us about your activities. You can also promote your events on our website or support our work with a donation. Contact us at Info@ket.brussels.
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