Private Members Club

Private Members Club




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The pandemic changes everything; how we work, where we live, how we socialise and London’s proliferation of private members’ clubs suddenly find themselves the vangard of this sea change.
Working from home has seriously lost its allure, but working from a club is convenient and fun. The outflux to the countryside is a boon to clubs with bedrooms for members to enjoy. Meanwhile we’re socialising smaller and better, which suits the private members’ club model perfectly. Finally, we’ve a renewed appreciation for the finer things in life, and clubs very much tick that box.
London’s private members’ clubs are world famous, for their sheer number, their popularity and their exclusivity. Nowhere does private members’ clubs like Britain, where the class system left off, clubs stepped in. And if there’s one thing more frustrating than bastions of elitism, and that’s not being a part of it.
But navigating the myriad of London clubs is opaque and tricky, so we’ve put all the best ones in one place. All you need to do now is get buttering up your proposer and seconder.
Annabel’s is legendary on the London club scene. It may not be the oldest, the grandest or the most exclusive, but it’s one of the best known clubs in London. And Annabel’s really is at the very top of its game at the moment. The club reopened after a whopping £65m spending splurge that saw them leave their traditional basement home a few doors down and instead occupy a substantial Berkeley Square townhouse in its entirety.
And the results are quite impressive. Martin Brudnizki, the ubiquitous interior designer, has created a playground perfect for the rich and famous. With multiple restaurants, bars and its infamous night club, Annabel’s has re-entered a busy members’ club market with an impressive offering.
Where: 46 Berkeley Square, Mayfair, W1J 5AT
Website: www.annabels.co.uk
Great for: People watching and dining in style
Who goes here: The power-set, the ultra-glam and super-rich social ascendees
Key membership benefits: Access to a world beating club, one of London’s most famous and splendid
Ease of entry: Members need to be proposed, good women candidates are currently fast-tracked
Membership cost: £1,000 entry and £3,250 per year
If you haven’t got a copy of OK Magazine to hand then don’t worry, simply head to The Groucho Club and see anyone who’s anyone in the flesh instead. The sometimes discreet, sometimes outrageous Soho club is a mecca for London’s media types, with no visit complete without meeting at least a handful of your heroes from stage and screen and at least one popstar to boot.
Launched in the ’80s, the club takes its name from Groucho Marx, who famously exclaimed that he wouldn’t be a member of any club that would accept him as a member.
Where: The Groucho Club, 45 Dean Street, Soho, W1D 4QB
Website: www.thegrouchoclub.com
Great for: Celebrity spotting and enjoying art
Who goes here: The great and the good of the stage, screen and charts, plus scurrilous journalists. 90s names like Alex James, Kate Moss, Damien Hirst and Peter Blake hang out with the likes of Nick Grimshaw, Harry Styles and co
Key membership benefits: Two fantastic restaurants and one of London’s most exclusive hangouts, plus the club aims to counter male culture by maintaining a majority women membership
Ease of entry: Tricky, members must’ve achieved something ‘significant’ in the arts, be proposed and seconded by members and considered by a discerning membership committee
Membership cost:£950 annual subscription plus £250 joining fee
If rollerdecks were still a thing then 5 Hertford Street would have the most impressive in the world. As it is, they’ll have to make do with probably the most impressive private members’ club in the world instead, filled with A-listers, the great and good.
Famously formed as a giant snub in the ongoing feud between founder Robin Birley and Annabel’s owner Richard Caring, the club is a labyrinthine sprawl of luxury. Number five has a genuine lived-in feel to it, scattered with armchairs and deep, plush, carpets, the Mayfair townhouse club is tardis-like, with multiple restaurants and bars, a cigar room, cinema, and the jewel in its crown, nightclub Loulou’s.
Since opening in 2012, the club’s already achieved legendary status, and is a firm favourite of blue-bloods and A-listers alike. Despite this, 5 Hertford Street remains a club where your grandparents will feel as comfortable spending their Sunday as you did spending the early hours of Saturday morning. The open fires, soft lighting and armchairs made to sink into make it a dream spot for lazing off your hangover, treating a date, or impressing your parents with your excellent lifestyle choices.
If rollerdecks were still a thing then 5 Hertford Street would have the most impressive in the world
Great for: Loulous and celebrity spotting
Who goes here: A-listers and aristos (Harry Styles was famously turned away)
Key membership benefits: Access to London’s most exclusive
Ease of entry: Difficult. Must be proposed and seconded by members and face a discerning membership committee
Membership cost: Famously secretive, but reportedly £1,800 a year
Where: 2-5 Hertford Street, Mayfair, W1J 7RB
Website: www.5hertfordstreet.co.uk
Ten years after its launch as London’s edgiest new club, Shoreditch House has retained its cool credentials but gained a little maturity, and a lot of members. Housed in (where else?) a converted East London warehouse, Shoreditch House offers members use of a bowling alley, Cowshed Spa and an impressive gym. But where Shoreditch House reaches dizzying heights are the is the top-floor restaurant and the rooftop pool with iconic views across London.
Housed in (where else?) a converted East London warehouse
The recently added ‘Shoreditch Rooms’ means you can now live amongst the hipsters with an overnight stay at one of the sister clubs; members have the option to make the most of facilities of Soho Houses in Istanbul, Toronto, New York, Berlin and Barcelona.
Great for: The party vibe and, of course, the rooftop pool
Who goes here: The cool, East London crowd (basically, millennials)
Key membership benefits: It’s got to be the pool! Also, good co-working space
Ease of entry: Two proposers required, more popular clubs are trickier to get entry to
Membership cost: £450 registration fee and £1,130 per year (£1,700 if you want access to other Soho House clubs)
Where: Ebor Street, Shoreditch, E1 6AW
Website: www.shoreditchhouse.com
Where: 9 West Street, Covent Garden, WC2H 9NE
Website: www.the-ivyclub.co.uk
Part of the ever-expanding Ivy empire, The Ivy Club is a newcomer but one worthy to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with the very best of London’s nightspots. Accessed via a discrete entrance round the corner from the eponymous restaurant, a short lift-ride and you’re in the exclusive confines of the three storey club.
The wood panelled drawing room features a pianist and bar while upstairs the minimalist loft feels like a spaceship or laboratory. The club is home to a membership made up of mainly creative types drawn from the media.
Great for: Food and drink, while the disco upstairs is pretty good too
Who goes here: Creative industry types, again, perhaps with a more corporate angle?
Key membership benefits: Entry via a special lift at The Ivy (not a benefit as such, but has a real hidden away feel)
Ease of entry: Members must be proposed and seconded by existing members
Membership cost: £500 joining fee, £1,250 annual membership
All male clubs may be the work of the devil, but all female clubs are progressive as hell. Which is good for AllBright Mayfair because the smart hangout for women includes a restaurant and bar, two secluded rooftop terraces, salon and fabulous interiors.
But Allbright Mayfair is more than a clubhouse or a place to hang out, there’s a real mission too. The club is a career network for women to connect, to launch a business or find friendships and unwind.
From talks from inspiring female founders, to restaurant residencies and networking opportunities, the beautiful surroundings are just the start. And even members who can’t get to Mayfair as often as they’d like can join digitally, with access to over 200 training courses and the chance to connect with women globally.
Great for: Empowered, self-improving women
Who goes here: Business leaders and entrepreneurs
Key membership benefits: The roster of events is impressive
Ease of entry: Well you need to be a woman, for starters
Membership cost: £300 joining fee and £1,500 annual membership
Where: 24-26 Maddox Street, Mayfair, W1S 1PP
Website: www.allbrightcollective.com
Britain doesn’t really do ‘country clubs’, probably because if we did they’d all be eclipsed by the Hurlingham Club. The Fulham club is where well-to-do Londoners go to hang out. Forget the racy Soho clubs, leave the fusty St James’s clubs to grandpa, grab your tennis whites, we’re going to The Hurlingham. The imposing house and manicured gardens are only as impressive as their waiting list.
It’s currently closed to newcomers, having reached 30 years long. The only way in is to be born to a member (a tricky option for you at this stage) or to marry one. Genuinely, it really is worth it.
Where: The Hurlingham Club, Ranelagh Gardens, Fulham, SW6 3PR
Website: www.hurlinghamclub.org.uk
Great for: Sporty types and families
Who goes here: Anyone who is anyone in South West London
Key membership benefits: The sports facilities are fantastic
Ease of entry: The waiting list is decades, better off marrying into it
Membership cost: £1,200 annual membership, plus a fee to be on the waiting list (if it opens again)
Great for: Smart-set Artists
Who goes here: Practising artists, or at least those with connections to the visual arts
Key membership benefits: Annual calendar of exhibitions, talks and events
Ease of entry: A proposer and seconder must put you forward (they need to have known you for more than two years). Membership has to be open (it’s currently closed)
Membership cost: £250 joining fee and £598 per year
Chelsea Arts Club is undeniably an institution of the members’ club scene, just one that’s a bit tricky to pigeon hole. Established in 1891, the club boasts over a century of artistic credentials and somehow it’s bohemian as ever.
Its creative crowd of members include painters, sculptors, filmmakers, poets and actors – making it the rebellious younger sister to the stuffy St James’ Clubs. Indeed, the club was banned from holding it’s annual ball in the Albert Hall in the 1950s due to its notorious reputation for ‘rowdiness, nudity and public homosexuality’. Still legendary for its parties, the Chelsea Arts Club also hosts a more reputable series of exclusive exhibitions, talks, screenings and performances from its artistic members.
Where: 143 Old Church Street, Chelsea, SW3 6EB
Website: www.chelseaartsclub.com
And we’re out of Mayfair, you can breathe again! And welcome to Hammersmith.
The unlikely location is perfect for anyone coming in from the West, for locals or for a chance to escape London’s city centre. And post pandemic that feels like a smart move.
A large Grade II listed Georgian mansion given over to members, Kindred is perfect for freelancers and work-from-home types, but also provides a diverse social life.
The restaurant, headed up by chef Romulo Silva serves ‘London Fusion’ food, celebrating the capital’s diversity and the communities that live here. A progressive detail that underscores how different (and attractive) Kindred membership is.
Where: Bradmore House, Queen Caroline Street, Hammersmith, W6 9BW
Website: www.wearekindred.com
Great for: A real inclusive vibe
Who goes here: Freelancers and work-from-homers
Key membership benefits: Diverse and with an active social calendar, plus it’s not in central London, but come with all the same perks.
Ease of entry: Apply online
Membership cost: £140 a month plus a £200 joining fee or £1,680 and no fee if you pay in one go
The Arts Club has undergone something of a renaissance, travelling from somewhat a fusty and fading institution a decade ago, to one of London’s most exclusive and right-on clubs today. The phoenix that has risen from not-quite the ashes is part hotel and part exclusive club. Below three storeys of Art Deco-inspired rooms and suites, sits a beautiful, airy club that’s a breath of fresh air to the club scene.
The clientele are genteel, the odd minor royal, a smart set interested in the arts
The clientele are genteel, the odd minor royal, a smart set interested in the arts and literature, or just fine dining and cigars. Workout in the Lanserhof gym, dine in the restaurant or head downstairs to Leo’s for a nightclubbing experience you won’t forget.
Great for: Enjoying the art collection
Who goes here: Turbo Sloanes and royals, the sort of people who decided 5 Hertford Street was too mainstream
Key membership benefits: The art and the events are noteworthy, the health club costs (a lot) extra, but it does have its own MRI machine!
Ease of entry: Members must be proposed and seconded by existing members
Membership cost: £2,000 joining fee, £2,000 annual membership
Where: 40 Dover Streeet, Mayfair, W1S 4NP
Website: www.theartsclub.co.uk
Home House is perhaps the perfect townhouse club. Occupying a vast property on Portman Square, Home House is a mix of imposing and homely, stately and welcoming. It’s got 7 different bars (including the Home Bar with its incredible, sculpted, Dame Zaha Hadid design), and three restaurants. Home House set the standard for large scale luxurious and modern townhouse clubbing, yes Annabel’s might be more beautiful, the Arts Club better connected, the House of St Barnabus more frenetic, but Home House was seemingly ahead of the curve, opening in 1998.
Remaining relevant for 20 years is a challenge, most members’ clubs have either been about for ever, or stagger off the scene, because they can’t find enough members or they go off the boil. Home House has lasted the course and is well on the way to becoming an institution.
Home House has lasted the course and is well on the way to becoming an institution
Great for: The ideal place to work during the day, then party during the night
Who goes here: A smart but discerning set
Key membership benefits: There’s no pool but there is a gym and wellness suite. Beautiful surroundings and interesting members
Ease of entry: No need for proposers etc
Membership cost: £299 joining fee and £1,940 annual membership
Where: 20 Portman Square, Fitrovia, W1H 6LW
Website: www.homehouse.co.uk
Great for: Being at the centre of the party
Who goes here: Young, millennial, professionals
Key membership benefits: Upgrade your membership for another £670 per year and use other clubs in the network (they’re everywhere, including two streets away on Dean Street!)
Ease of entry: Ideally they’d like you to be in the creative industries. Oh, and don’t wear a tie, whatever you do!
Membership cost: £450 joining fee and £1,030 per year
If you’re the sort of person who refuses to watch the remake of The Thomas Crown Affair or Oceans Eleven, then you’re probably after the original Soho House too. To you, all the other Soho Houses are as worthless as the rebooted Jumanji or Italian Job, and good for you. Ground zero in the seemingly exponential explosion of Soho House as it spreads its achingly cool appeal across the globe one rooftop pool after another, Soho House Greek Street really is where it all started.
To you, all the other Soho Houses are as worthless as the rebooted Jumanji
Occupying five historic Georgian townhouses the club has an outdoor courtyard, roof deck, bar, restaurant and many many club rooms. Labyrinthine and always chokka block of people you know, think you’ve met before or want to meet now, it’s always a party and always fun.
Where: 40 Greek Street, Soho, W1D 4EB
Website: www.sohohouse.com
Somehow tucked discreetly away behind Shaftesbury Avenue, one hundred steps take you up to the aptly named Century Club, spread across five floors of members’ areas. With its vogueish decor, airy spaces big enough to make you feel miles from the scrum of Soho, The Century Club is a real sanctuary.
Playing host to talks and live music members can enjoy four exclusive bars, three restaurants and three separate roof terraces, without doubt The Century Club’s secret weapon. Soho’s largest rooftop doubled in size during lockdown and it ideal for gazing across the lights of the West End with a sundowner in hand.
Where: 61-63 Shaftesbury Avenue, Westminster, W1D 6LQ
Website: www.centuryclub.co.uk
Great for: Soho’s largest rooftop terrace
Who goes here: Anyone looking for a different take on the Soho club
Key membership benefits: The rooftop terrace is great for summer
Ease of entry: Apply online
Membership cost: £250 joining fee and £875 per year membership
Great for: Dining (the smoked eel sandwich is famous)
Who goes here: Restauranteurs, arts and culture types and creatives
Key membership benefits: Members’ events and private dining
Ease of entry: New members must be proposed and seconded by existing members and considered by the membership committee
Membership cost: £150 joining fee and £550 a year
Where: 26-29 Dean St, London, W1D 3LL
Website: www.quovadissoho.co.uk
Where are we going? Quo Vadis… The restaurant and club, housed in a former brothel that was once the home of Karl Marx (presumably not at the same time), combines a triumphant Soho restaurant with a private members’ club.
An ideal respite from the carnage of a Soho evening
The restaurant, small and nearly perfect, is available to muggles, but members upstairs can enjoy the Dean Street club’s private dining room, as well as the homely ‘snug’ room and two bars, making it an ideal respite from the carnage of a Soho evening. Quo Vadis underwent substantial refurbishment in 2016 and the new interior is a gorgeously lit masterpiece of lush carpets and moodily painted walls, giving an old-school luxury feel.
Eight is basically the perfect kids’ den, if those kids were in their 30s and bunking off from their corporate city job. Set in what can only be described as a bunker, you descend several flights to even reach this dark cavern of fun. And fun there is, because they’ve got pool tables to prove it.
Eight doesn’t give you a smorgasbord of choices, like The Ned, and let you see if any of them work, instead it takes a tried and tested formula and applies if perfectly.
Where: 1 Change Alley, The City, EC3V 3ND
Website: www.eightclub.co.uk
Great for: Just being bloody cool
Who goes here: Cityboys
Key membership benefits: An escape from your mindlessly dull but well paying job. Also, if you’re entrepreneurial you can use them as a business address
Ease of entry: Pretty simple
Membership cost: Annual subs of £1,080 plus there’s a very affordable £75 joining fee. This also gets
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