Industrial spaces. Heavy bass. No velvet ropes, no bottle service, no compromise. Spunris3 transforms NoDa's creative spaces into underground bass music experiences built for riddim goblins and heavy bass heads.
NoDa's identity as Charlotte's arts district was built on repurposed industrial space โ old warehouses, converted storefronts, and creative buildings that don't fit neatly into any other category. That same industrial DNA is what makes NoDa the natural home for Charlotte's underground warehouse party scene.
A warehouse party is fundamentally different from a club night. No overpacked dance floor with a DJ booth behind velvet ropes. No table minimums. No mainstream playlist. Spunris3 uses NoDa's industrial and creative spaces to create bass music environments where the sound can truly breathe โ and the heavy sub-bass frequencies that riddim and dubstep demand have room to do their work.
Most Charlotte venues are built for a predictable night. Spunris3 warehouse events in NoDa are built for an experience. Here's what that means in practice:
Industrial spaces let the sound system breathe. Heavy sub-bass from riddim and dubstep hits differently in a warehouse than in a standard club.
No house lights, no awkward booth setups. Spunris3 builds lighting rigs that transform the raw space into something cinematic.
The underground doesn't do VIP sections. Every person in the room is there because they love the music โ no table minimums or social hierarchy.
Peace, Love, Unity, Respect governs every Spunris3 warehouse event. The space is intimate enough that everyone feels accountable to it.
Even in warehouse settings, Spunris3 keeps the community engaged with raffles, giveaways, and cash prize costume contests.
Warehouse parties shouldn't cost $40 to walk in. Spunris3 keeps the underground accessible โ typically $10 general admission.
Spunris3 warehouse events are not a place for house music or techno. The music is heavy, bass-forward, and built specifically for people who came to feel it in their chest. The NoDa warehouse party genre lineup:
Riddim โ the heaviest, most rhythmically complex form of dubstep. Designed to make a room full of bassheads move as one organism. Dubstep โ the foundation of the bass music world, with drops built to destroy speaker cones and rattles whatever isn't bolted down. Drum & Bass โ rapid-fire percussion over deep bass lines that turns industrial warehouse floors into high-energy dance spaces. Heavy wubs โ the sounds that are hard to categorize but impossible to ignore, the defining sonic signature of a Spunris3 event.
Rashante Ford (@spunris3) curates the DJ lineups personally, selecting artists who understand what a NoDa warehouse crowd needs from their music. No filler, no compromises.
Follow @spunris3 on Instagram to get warehouse event locations when they drop. The underground doesn't advertise โ it communicates.