The sonic experience at Printworks was built on a foundation of world-class engineering. The venue's custom-installed d&b audiotechnik sound system was specifically designed and tuned for the extraordinary acoustic challenges of the Press Halls — a 130-metre-long concrete corridor with hard, reflective surfaces and a vast volume of air. Getting sound right in a space like this is an immense technical challenge, and the team behind Printworks invested heavily in ensuring that the system delivered clarity, power, and immersion at every point in the room, not just at the front.
The d&b audiotechnik system was distributed along the length of the Press Halls in carefully calculated arrays, ensuring even coverage across the enormous floor area. Sub-bass was powerful enough to be felt physically — a visceral, chest-rattling presence that was essential for techno and drum and bass events — while the mid-range and high frequencies maintained the clarity needed for more nuanced, melodic programming. DJs who played Printworks frequently praised the system for its fidelity and its ability to reveal the detail in a mix, even at the extreme volumes demanded by the space.
But sound was only part of the Printworks production equation. The light shows were legendary — arguably the most spectacular of any club venue in the world. The Press Halls' industrial strip lighting, combined with a massive complement of moving heads, lasers, strobes, and LED arrays, created visual experiences that matched the scale and intensity of the music. Production designers worked with the architecture of the building itself, using the 130-metre sightlines, the exposed beams, and the concrete surfaces to create light installations that were more akin to large-scale art than traditional club lighting.
The daytime format added another dimension to the production. Because events began in the afternoon, designers could play with the transition from natural to artificial light as the day progressed. The journey from daylight to darkness, from the openness of the afternoon to the intensity of the evening sessions, mirrored the musical arc of the events themselves and gave Printworks a rhythmic, narrative quality that purely nocturnal venues could not replicate.