The World’s Six Most Unusual Clubs

Published May 1, 2012
Updated January 17, 2018

Most Unusual Clubs: Watt, Netherlands

Unusual Clubs Watt Club

Watt Club in Rotterdam, Netherlands, is a sustainable club with lower energy, water consumption and gas emissions than most. The club architects pride themselves on a reduction of 30% in energy consumption, 50% less water use, 50% less refuse generated and 30% less CO2 emissions compared to most clubs. Watt achieves this with its sustainable dance floor, which is made from a series of light-laden panels that respond to and generate electricity from the movement of patrons, rainwater-fed toilets, low-waste bars and harvested heat from sound equipment.

Watt Club

Cross Club, Czech Republic

Unusual Clubs Kross Klub

To promote responsible drinking, the Cross Club in Prague is completely decorated in crashed cars and buses. The décor promotes anti-drunk driving, with scraps of car engines dangling from the ceiling and greased gears along the walls.

Kross Klub Prague

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author
Mamta Bhatt
author
editor
Savannah Cox
editor
Savannah Cox holds a Master's in International Affairs from The New School as well as a PhD from the University of California, Berkeley, and now serves as an Assistant Professor at the University of Sheffield. Her work as a writer has also appeared on DNAinfo.
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Bhatt, Mamta. "The World’s Six Most Unusual Clubs." AllThatsInteresting.com, May 1, 2012, https://mirror.pbh-network.com/worlds-unusual-clubs/. Accessed March 20, 2026.