Kraftwerk Berlin is set to stage a 30-hour continuous event this May, where attendees will be able to purchase beds, hammocks and dedicated rest areas as part of the experience. Titled The Infinite Now, the project is a collaboration between Berlin Atonal and Unsound, taking place across May 16–17 inside the former power station.
Running from Saturday evening through to late Sunday night, the programme unfolds as a near-unbroken stretch of sound and performance across more than a full day. The industrial-scale venue will host over 20 artists, with sets designed to flow through night, daylight and back into darkness again.
A defining feature of the event is its tiered access system, which includes a “bed pass” allowing guests to stay on site for the full duration. This option gives continuous entry from Saturday evening until midnight on Sunday, with sleeping areas, hammocks and soft zones integrated throughout the building.

Rather than separating rest from performance, the format deliberately incorporates it. Sleep becomes part of the structure of the event itself, blurring the line between audience presence, recovery and listening over extended time. The concept pushes club programming into more experimental territory. Instead of a traditional schedule of peak-time sets, The Infinite Now unfolds as a long-form environment where time, attention and fatigue shape how the experience is received.
Berlin Atonal has long operated at the more conceptual edge of electronic music programming, while Unsound has similarly explored extended formats and non-traditional listening contexts. This collaboration continues that trajectory, expanding it into one of the most physically immersive versions yet. Ticket options include full 30-hour access with or without a bed, as well as Sunday-only entry and separate opening event passes, reflecting different ways of engaging with the programme.
Taking place at Kraftwerk Berlin, The Infinite Now further reinforces the venue’s role as a space for large-scale, immersive electronic music experiences built around architectural and sensory scale.