Dance Lab New York
About
Non-profits keep the city’s creative pulse alive. Dance Lab New York is one of those quiet forces, operating as a nonprofit that supports movement-based arts. It’s not a performance venue or a studio you’d stumble into for drop-in classes—this is a space where choreographers, dancers, and interdisciplinary artists find resources to develop work. The address, 307 W 38th St 9th Floor, places it in that stretch of Midtown where garment districts blur into theater adjacency, a block removed from the tourist crush but still humming with industry.
The ninth floor might sound like an odd spot for a dance organization, but Midtown’s vertical layout has always forced creativity into unexpected corners. This isn’t about recitals or beginner ballet; the focus here leans toward experimentation, residencies, and the kind of collaborative projects that need space more than spectacle. You won’t find a marquee out front or a lobby buzzing with parents—just a nameplate in the building directory and a mission that’s more about process than polished shows.
Logistics are simple: no public walk-ins mean you’ll want to confirm details before heading over. Questions about programs or partnerships? The phone line connects directly to the team, though like many arts nonprofits, responses might take a beat—patience is part of the ecosystem. It’s the kind of place where the work happens behind closed doors, then ripples outward through festivals, grants, or the next generation of dancers who pass through its programs.
If you’re mapping it out, this link drops you right at the building entrance. And honestly? Most New Yorkers will walk by a dozen times without realizing what’s happening upstairs—which, in a way, is the point.