
Name: Nike Dunk Low “CBGB”
Colorway: Metallic Silver/College Grey-Cave Stone-Off Noir
SKU: IB2258-001
MSRP: $130 USD
Release Date: June 2
Where to Buy: Nike
Nike is channeling the energy of the legendary CBGB on a Dunk Low, and somehow it doesn’t feel like a stretch. The shoe earns the reference: a distressed upper that reads like the venue’s famously poster-plastered walls, street sign labels for Bleecker and Bowery printed on the inner tongues, and the kind of restraint that suggests someone at Nike actually knows why that corner of downtown Manhattan matters.
The distressed upper is the right starting point for a CBGB tribute. The torn and worn-in material directly references the venue’s famously chaotic interior — walls plastered with overlapping flyers and posters, surfaces accumulated over decades of shows — rather than reaching for a cleaner graphic homage. In Metallic Silver, College Grey, Cave Stone, and Off Noir, the palette keeps things appropriately gritty without veering into costume territory. The texture work does the conceptual heavy lifting before the branding even enters the conversation.
When the branding does arrive, it is specific rather than decorative. CBGB logos sit on the tongue and heel, but the detail that earns the most credit is the Bleecker and Bowery street sign labels on the inner tongues. The club’s original address was 315 Bowery, at the corner of Bleecker Street, and anchoring the design to that intersection rather than just the logo turns the shoe into something more precise than standard venue merchandise. It acknowledges the place rather than just the name, which is a meaningfully different kind of tribute.
CBGB opened in 1973, closed in 2006, and spent those three decades as the physical address of American punk and new wave’s foundational moment. The Ramones, Blondie, Television, Talking Heads, Patti Smith — the list of artists who played there reads like the entire origin story of a musical era. Nike’s decision to approach that history with restraint rather than maximalism is the correct one. The Dunk has hosted enough cultural tributes to know when less is more, and the CBGB build reads as a shoe made by people who actually understand what the venue represented rather than one that simply licensed the logo.
