
There’s something happening in Phoenix that doesn’t look like traditional nightlife, networking, wellness culture, or entertainment—but somehow contains pieces of all of them. It’s called Club Lumen, and it’s led by community builder, facilitator, and joy-activator Zoë Bibbes, whose mission is simple: create environments where people feel safe enough to express themselves.
Instead of waiting for the perfect venue or curated event space, Club Lumen brings connection into places people already occupy. One moment it’s a coffee shop; a few minutes later, it feels like a dance floor. That’s what makes Club Lumen different.
Who Is Zoë Bibbes?
Zoë is not a performer, promoter, or influencer in the traditional sense. She’s a catalyst.
Her personal philosophy is that joy should not be reserved for special occasions, nightlife outings, or milestone moments. She believes people can access joy and connection right where they are, even if that’s while waiting for coffee, finishing work, or walking into a public space alone.
Her intention with Club Lumen is to build experiences that dissolve social pressure and remind people how to express themselves freely.
We had a full sit down with her to chat about her thought process and inspiration going into creating the Club Lumen project:
What Club Lumen Actually Is
Club Lumen is not a venue or a scheduled weekly program. It’s not tied to a menu, a ticket price, or a formal stage.
Instead, it exists as a mobile energy shift, hosted wherever people gather:
- coffee shops
- public spaces
- small collective environments
- creative studios
- pop-ups

From my perspective, the concept is grounded in three elements:
1) Presence
People arrive as themselves without needing to perform or present a certain image. There’s no expectation to impress or match a vibe. That simplicity creates a calm, open atmosphere where everyone can settle in and just be there without pressure.
2) Expression
Movement starts small. Someone sways, someone hums, someone lets the music guide them a little. There’s no sense of being watched or judged. Expression can be dancing, singing, or just feeling the moment in your own way. It gives the room a warmer, more playful feel.
3) Participation
This is where the shift happens. When people choose to join the moment instead of staying on the sidelines, the space becomes something different. Routine fades and the energy lifts. In the video, a quiet café turned into a spontaneous mini dance scene because a few people leaned into the moment. Participation turns an ordinary setting into a shared experience.
Why People Connect With Club Lumen, and the Bigger Cultural Shift

There’s a reason people walk away from Club Lumen feeling like something genuine just happened. It offers what most adults rarely get access to anymore: play without being intoxicated, movement without comparison, and moments that don’t require documentation to feel meaningful. You don’t need to post anything or pretend you’re having a good time. You don’t need to curate an identity at the door. You get to exist without performing.
What makes this strike so deeply is that it mirrors a broader cultural shift happening beneath the surface. A lot of young adults are quietly craving spaces that aren’t transactional or image-driven, places where showing up is enough. After years of social interaction being filtered through dating apps, bars, nightlife routines, and screens, there’s a fatigue that people don’t always name but feel. Club Lumen brushes up against that need.
It slips into the gap between daily routine and manufactured social experiences, creating something that feels unforced. Strangers share movement without context. People enjoy music without needing a “scene.” The experience isn’t built around being seen; it’s built around being there. In a time where connection often feels staged or scheduled, Club Lumen gives people an easy way to feel real again.
What’s Next for Club Lumen?
The emerging plan includes regular high-intent gatherings, invite-only studio sessions, curated pop-ups, spaces designed around movement and self-expression, collaborations with, wellness, creative, and lifestyle-aligned brands
Zoë is actively building out a structure that will allow these gatherings to scale while maintaining the intimacy and authenticity that makes them powerful. There is no rush, and she’s not trying to industrialize joy. She’s shaping it carefully.
Why This Kind of Experience Matters
Club Lumen matters because it reminds people that joy doesn’t require a special environment. Connection doesn’t require an icebreaker. And presence doesn’t require perfection.
People just need a signal that it’s allowed, a space where expression isn’t judged, and someone who goes first. That someone, right now, is Zoë. And Club Lumen is the container she uses to unlock it for others.



