The big (classic rock) news is official: Bob Dylan, the Rolling Stones, Paul McCartney, the Who, Neil Young, and Pink Floyd’s Roger Waters are holding a new Coachella — obviously for oldsters.

Average age of the participants: 72 (or so). It’s already being dubbed “Oldchella” on Twitter. “Yeah man, far out,” said more than one online fan who was blown away by the news.

The Oct. 7-9 event will be at the Empire Polo Field in Indio, California, the annual site of the super cool Coachella and Stagecoach music festivals. Tickets will range from $199 to $1,599. The rock legends, or “six acts with a claim to be on the Mt. Rushmore of rock music,” as the Los Angeles Times put it, will perform for the first time on the same stage over three nights.

But what will the bathroom situation be? That’s most likely what these ticket-buyers will want to know.

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And what about seating?

Goldenvoice, the promoter of the event, told the Times that it is expecting an “older” audience, so there will be seating in grandstands and on the ground — unlike the Coachella fest, where the hipster crowd is happy to stand or sit on the grass.

Goldenvoice President Paul Tollett told the Times he has been inundated with suggestions that the concert should include artists such as Led Zeppelin and Bruce Springsteen.

“I’ve been known for doing reunions from time to time,” he said, noting that Coachella has featured the reunions of bands such as Guns N’ Roses, OutKast, LCD Soundsystem, and Rage Against the Machine. “I didn’t want this to be rare. I wanted it to be significant.”

Tickets, which go on sale Monday, May 9, will start at $199 for single-day general admission passes, and top out at $1,599 for reserved seats for all three days. The $1,599 ticket price also will apply to admission to a standing-room pit immediately in front of the stage. General admission three-day passes will sell for $399.

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Goldenvoice, a unit of AEG, plans to cap ticket sales at about the same level the company has done for Stagecoach in recent years, at 70,000 to 75,000 per day, says the Times. Coachella has held attendance in recent years at 99,000 per day.

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The lineup will break down like this: Dylan and the Stones will open the event Oct. 7, Young will play before McCartney on Oct. 8, and the Who and Roger Waters will close the weekend on Oct. 9, according to DesertTrip.com, the event site.

As for the food, there will be an expanded menu of pop-up restaurants in addition to the food and beverage booths typically in operation at Coachella and Stagecoach.

And the bathroom situation? On the FAQ page of the event site, it says there will be “gender neutral restrooms” and that “banks of permanent flushable toilets and sinks have been increased on site.”

Take note, also, that hoverboards, drones, and selfie sticks are NOT allowed. But, yes, baby boomers, you will be happy to hear that lighters ARE allowed. You’ll be wanting to hold ’em high — just as you did decades ago at your very first concert.

Tollett said the three-day show will not be given a name, a la Coachella and Stagecoach, because “we are not trying to brand anything. This is happening one time, and that’s it.”

We’ve done it for them: GeezerFest 2016.