There are festivals, and then there’s Paradise City. For one sun-drenched weekend in June, just outside Brussels, this boutique gathering transforms the Château de Ribaucourt into a sanctuary of rhythm, connection, and conscious pleasure. In its tenth edition, the sold-out event didn’t just celebrate a milestone — it embodied a vision of the future: stylish, sustainable, and soulfully sonic.
A New Kind of Hedonism
Paradise City started as a whisper in the Belgian nightlife scene. Ten years later, it speaks volumes. With 45,000 revelers dancing beneath centuries-old trees and a lineup bridging techno titans (Jeff Mills, Laurent Garnier) and next-gen trailblazers (KI/KI, Chris Stussy), this isn’t just a music festival — it’s a curated experience for the sensually curious.

But what sets it apart isn’t just the beats — it’s the ethos. Imagine barefoot dancing at a funk-infused stage hidden in the woods. Vegan feasts crafted from local ingredients, where the CO₂ footprint of your meal is printed on the menu. Or sipping organic wine while the sun dips behind a solar-powered stage. Paradise City seduces with softness and substance, offering a more thoughtful way to revel.
Techno Meets Tenderness
In a world chasing spectacle, Paradise City chose intimacy. The festival site was redesigned not to hold more people, but to give each one more space. Shady lounging zones, scenic walking paths, and immersive sound systems meant that even peak-hour sets felt personal. This isn’t about losing yourself — it’s about finding new ways to be present.
The iconic Barefoot Stage debuted this year: no shoes, no stress, just groove. It’s the kind of detail that sums up Paradise City’s magic — an invitation to reconnect with the earth, the body, the moment. Whether you came to dance until sunrise or slow down under an oak tree, the environment elevated every choice.

Planet-First, Pleasure-Forward
Named the world’s most sustainable music festival in 2024, Paradise City doubled down in 2025. Over 230 solar panels, intelligent battery grids, and zero single-use plastic — these aren’t just bullet points, they’re values brought to life. Every food vendor signed a Green Charter. Trains, e-shuttles, bike parks: mobility was part of the mission.
What’s radical here isn’t just the tech — it’s the elegance of the execution. You didn’t feel like you were compromising. You felt like you were part of something refined, aware, and alive.

The Future Sounds Like This
For today’s modern man — globally minded, emotionally fluent, and aesthetically attuned — Paradise City offers a blueprint. A space where masculinity isn’t rigid but radiant, where style meets substance, and where joy has a conscience.
As the final beat echoed across the castle grounds, founder Gilles De Decker said it best: “In 2025, we’ve come full circle. A festival that blends musical excellence with deep ecological commitment. We can’t wait to see where the next ten years take us.”
Neither can we.
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