Genx Dance School Noida

Genx Dance School Noida
Shop no 2, Aakriti Shantiniketan, near Advant Mall, Block A, Sector 143B, Noida, Uttar Pradesh 201306, India
https://linktr.ee/Genxdance
Genx Dance School, Noida – the address says Sector 62, but step inside and geography dissolves into raw rhythm. The 1,800-square-foot studio floods with daylight filtered through matte-glass walls on three sides. Bamboo flooring, laid in floating panels over neoprene sub-layers, apologizes to your knees while it propels your feet. Two sides of mirror span floor-to-ceiling; between them runs a waist-high ballet barre of steam-bent ash. On the far wall a discreet colour-changing LED grid syncs to whatever BPM is pulsing from the 6-speaker Funktion-One system overhead. A concealed subwoofer in the corner delivers bass you feel in the ribcage rather than hear; volume stays locked at 85 dB so neighbors don’t revolt yet dancers still transcend.

Class grid is non-negotiable only about variety: Bollywood commercial at 7 a.m., classical Kathak at 8:30, hip-hop foundations at noon, contemporary release technique at 4 p.m., Latin social at 6, and open-format heels at 8. Weekends shift to workshops: popping & locking labs, Afro-Cuban body isolations with Paris-based guest Jason N’gala, industry choreography mock auditions shot on 4K to edit and mail reels straight home. Owners Anushree Guha and Sanjeet Bharadwaj—alumni of Shiamak Davar and Broadway Dance Center respectively—rotate teaching duties to keep the energy feral. Every cohort ends the month performing in the internal “Black Box”, a 40-seat micro-theatre walled in acoustic felt where parents can livestream on Twitch if Delhi traffic wins.

Lockers have fingerprint locks; showers have rainfall heads, biodegradable shampoo, and actual paper towels (a bigger deal in Noida than in New York). A two-camera motion-capture rig in Studio B records angles for instant form-correction on a 75-inch OLED—handy for exams under the Imperial Society of Teachers of Dancing syllabus, which the school adopted in 2023. If you’re prepping for a wedding sangeet, the same tech turns your cousin squad into synchronised cinematics overnight.

Tuition is tiered rather than swollen: drop-in ₹700, unlimited monthly ₹4,200, or an “all-access year” at ₹44,000 that includes competition fees and three public-show costumes. First-time visitors arrive through an orange door shaped like the top-half of a treble clef; by the second visit their names blink on RFID wristbands that open lockers and mark attendance before the speaker even calls, “Five, six, seven, eight!”

Check on Google Maps









  • Published: July 30, 2025

( 0 Reviews )

Add review

Recently viewed

View all
Top