Final clubs around the world

Roppongi Hills Club occupies the heights of the Roppongi Hills Mori Tower’s 51st floor, and is a gathering place for arts-and-culture lovers. Overlooking Tokyo Bay and the surrounding area, the sleek venue, designed by Conran and Partners, has several restaurants and two bars. (Photo: Roppongi Hills Club)

The Quorum Club in Gurugram, India, described as an ‘urban refuge’, spread over a 22,000-sq-ft space. The club offers entertainment, plus spaces for drinking, working and keeping fit and art gallery exhibition by contemporary artists. (Photo: Quorum Club)

The Mesh Club is also the members-only, co-working and lifestyle space, in Rosebank, Johannesburg. The sleek interior blends industrial aesthetic with luxurious touches, and adorning the walls is a varied selection of both du jour  and classic art. (Photo: Mesh Club)

Oasis Clubhouse located in Buenos Aires featured with a steak restaurant, two bars and a lush garden and pool. The clubs location is in the Palermo Soho neighbourhood, and housed in a converted four-storey residence. Original Warhol artworks adorn the walls. (Photo: The Clubhouse, Buenos Aires)

An imposing Georgian manor house in acres of Somerset countryside, Babington House is a favorite celebrity retreat. The style of Babington is a cosy-but-luxe mix of color, print and textures that creates a quirky, comforting English style. (Photo: Soho House Group)

Tank Architecture & Interior Design created the out-there look of the Amsterdam club, A’dam&co. Its central interior feature is a grand wooden sculpture representing a ‘tree of life’ that provides a sense of ‘playfulness and shelter’. The bar is an oval table of copper, wood, brass and stainless steel. A roof terrace with a 360-degree view of Amsterdam is one of the club’s main attractions. (Photo: A’dam&Co.)

Singapore members’ club 1880 aims to blur the line between work and socialising. Designed by Timothy Oulton Studio, the smart interior is a blend of Chinese motifs and industrial style, and features earthy materials, including wood and minerals – the reception desk has been created in ancient rose quartz. (Photo: 1880 Singapore)

With its ornate, intimate interior, the exclusive Kee Club, Shanghai, is housed on the third and fourth levels of a 1920s neoclassical villa, complete with cast-iron gates and grand entrance. A branch of the longer established Hong Kong Kee Club, the Shanghai outpost has a sumptuous but cosy aesthetic. (Photo: Kee Club)

The swish Groucho Club in London’s Soho is the world’s most established media-and-arts club, and is a favorite with artists. Known for its unrivalled contemporary art collection, bohemian ambience and irreverent edge, the club was re-designed a few years ago by Michaelis Boyd Associates who restored many of the building’s original features, such as the main staircase and timber panelling. (Photo: Groucho Club)

The retro-luxe interior of Dumbo House in Brooklyn is decorated to reflect the look of artists’ studios that have been located in the neighbourhood since the 1960s and ‘70s, and the color of the walls is ‘Manhattan Bridge blue’. With a roof-deck pool and a great vista of bridge and city, the club is a recent addition to the Soho House group. (Photo: Soho House Group)


Source: Members clubs around the world- BBC

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