Inside the world’s most exclusive member-only clubs

Havens of culture and creativity, they lure members with professional connections, pampering amenities, and, above all, utter exclusivity.

By Laurie Kahle 11/02/2017

The private club has a long and gentlemanly history, originating in 18th-century London as a retreat for like-minded — and, by all accounts, well-heeled — men of a certain social status.

Today, while the general concept remains the same, social clubs have evolved into au courant havens of culture and creativity, luring members with professional connections, pampering amenities, and, above all, utter exclusivity. Read on for the inside scoop on 10 of the world’s most elite private clubs, and most importantly, how to join.

Core Club (New York)

Located in the heart of Midtown Manhattan, Core Club updates the notion of stuffy old-school social clubs by tapping in to today’s freewheeling digital zeitgeist with an emphasis on discovery and innovation.

Members engage with high-tech assets and cultural programming that includes art exhibits, film screenings, concerts, and stimulating discussions with luminaries such as Sir Richard Branson, Google’s Eric Schmidt, and biologist Richard Dawkins.

Membership: $US50,000 (about $A65,430) registration fee, plus $US17,000 (about $A22,250) per year. (thecoreclub.com)

Soho House Barcelona (Barcelona, Spain)

Barcelona is the latest city to join Soho House’s ever-growing roster of private gathering spaces for the creative crowd. Located in the Gothic Quarter overlooking Port Vell Marina, Soho House Barcelona occupies an 18th-century building with exposed brick walls, vaulted ceilings, and interiors that exude the decidedly hip flair for which Soho House is acclaimed.

You don’t have to be a member to book one of the 57 guest rooms, but a few coveted spaces — including the House’s lounge and restaurant — are reserved only for bona fide card carriers.

Membership: Around $US1950 (about $A2550) annually, plus $US450 (about $A590) initiation fee; membership includes access to other Soho House locations worldwide. (sohohousebarcelona.com)

Capital Club (Dubai, United Arab Emirates)

With a membership drawing primarily from government and business sectors, Dubai’s bustling Capital Club provides a hub for connecting personally and professionally.

Aside from the usual culinary amenities, the club offers business services and spaces for meetings and presentations. A busy social calendar includes a series of lectures and discussions led by prominent speakers who address issues that span socio-political, commercial, and cultural concerns — from Brexit to the recent U.S. elections.

Membership: Around $US15,000 (about $A19,630) to join, plus about $US270 (about $A350) in annual dues. (capitalclubdubai.com)

The Carnegie Club at Skibo Castle (Dornach, Scotland)

A world apart from its chic city counterparts, the Carnegie Club at Skibo Castle is a vast country estate set on 3240 hectares in the Scottish Highlands. Named for Andrew Carnegie, who restored the estate for his grand summer residence, the property has been meticulously refurbished and preserved.

The castle’s 21 guestrooms or 11 freestanding lodges give guests a home away from home for classic country holidays filled with horseback riding, shooting, fishing, swimming, tennis, and golf.

Membership: Joining fee of about $US31,670 (about $A41,440), plus an annual membership charge of about $US10,134 (about $A13,250). (carnegieclub.co.uk)

The Arts Club (London)

When Charles Dickens and his fellow luminaries founded London’s Arts Club in 1863, they sought to create a forum for devotees of art, literature, and science. The club has since evolved into a posh Mayfair gathering spot with acclaimed eateries and a diverse calendar of music, cultural, and art events.

Recently, the Arts added 16 guestrooms reserved exclusively for members and their guests. Infused with art deco flair, the chic suites are decorated with more than 40 original photographic works that have broadened the club’s permanent collection of contemporary art works.

Membership: Around $US2515 (about $A3290) per year, plus a $US2515 (about $A3290) joining fee. (theartsclub.co.uk)

The Clubhouse (Buenos Aires, Argentina)

Buenos Aires’s only private social club, the Clubhouse hosts lively events — film screenings, celebrity-chef dinners, art exhibitions, and pool parties — for the Argentine capital’s fun-loving movers and shakers.

Set within a former residence in the city’s trendy Palermo Soho barrio, the property features a swimming pool, a garden, two bars, and four guestrooms. The ambience is intimate and artsy, with original Warhols hanging in the lounge, where members can share a drink with local artists displaying their works in rotating exhibitions.

Membership: Around $US600 (about $A785) per year, with access to sister members’ clubs around the world. (clubhouseba.com)

Spoke Club (Toronto)

Toronto’s arts and entertainment influencers converge at the Spoke Club, located in an antique brick building on the King West strip.

The club’s versatile gathering spaces for working, learning, eating, and drinking include a gallery for art exhibitions, a screening room, a library, a wine cellar, a private dining room, and the rooftop Glass House with panoramic views of the T-dot skyline.

Membership: Around $US1000 (about $A1300) per year, plus a one-time initiation fee of roughly $US500 (about $A650). (thespokeclub.com)

South Kensington Club (London)

Located within a landmark 19th-century building, the South Kensington Club adds a vital health-and-wellness angle to the typical mix of culture and cuisine.

Top-notch fitness facilities include three studios offering everything from hot yoga to boxing, while the bathhouse features banyas, hammams, a saltwater Watsu pool, and treatment rooms for spa therapies.

The club’s Voyager Program merges motivational lectures with related expeditions and training to inspire members to venture beyond their comfort zones.

Membership: Around $US4400 (about $A5760) per year, plus an approximate $US1250 (about $A1635) initiation fee. (southkensingtonclub.com)

The Battery (San Francisco)

San Francisco’s invitation-only social club is strict on the “social” component: Computer-use and business talk are discouraged to maintain a laidback and leisurely atmosphere. Located within a 5390-square-metre former marble factory in the Financial District, the Battery keeps things convivial with four bars, a wine cellar, a library, an outdoor garden, and a wellness centre that features a gym and spa.

There is also a restaurant and 14 guest rooms, including a penthouse with panoramic views of the Bay Bridge. The focus on leisure — whether art, wine, food, or fitness — is advanced with a full roster of events and seminars, including exhibitions, tastings, and musical performances.

Membership: $US2400 (about $A3140) per year; applicants must be nominated by an existing member. (thebatterysf.com)

Little Beach House Malibu (Malibu, California)

Little Beach Club Malibu may be Soho House’s most elite outpost to date. The sunny Californian club, set within a modern beach mansion just off Pacific Coast Highway, has its own standalone membership, reserved only for locals.

For those who make the cut, the rewards are many. The vibe is barefoot chic, with wining and dining spaces that encourage members to eat, drink, and relax both on and off Malibu’s most exclusive strip of sand.

Membership: $US2000 (about $A2620) per year, plus a one-time fee of $US400 (about $A525). (littlebeachhousemalibu.com)

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Show Stopping Fun

Robb Report Australia and New Zealand teamed up with Sydney Harbour Concours d’Elegance in late February to celebrate a weekend of fine motor cars on Cockatoo Island.

By Robb Report Team 04/03/2025

Robb Report Australia & New Zealand and Citizen Kanebridge, the new private members’ club brought to you by this masthead’s publishers, offers exclusive access to magical experiences and unrivalled networking.

This year’s Sydney Harbour Concours d’Elegance on Cockatoo Island did not disappoint. Our invited guests—including speakers Gerard Doyle, General Manager ASX Refinitiv Charity Foundation; Ant Middleton, the British adventure and TV personality turned hydration-drink disruptor and owner R3SUP; and Lex Pedersen, CEO of automotive investment firm Chrome Temple—enjoyed unlimited access to the three-day event and an elegant sufficiently of Champagne, wine and whisky, as well as an exquisite catered lunch inside the Citizen Kanebridge Private Members’ Lounge. They enhanced their experience by VIP transport to and from the mainland via superyacht.

Courtesy of Sydney Harbour Concours d’Elegance

The British-born event, which also has iterations at Pebble Beach in California and Hampton Court Palace in England, once again teamed up with the world’s most prestigious marques (among them Aston Martin, Bentley, Brabus, Genesis, Lamborghini, McLaren, Rolls-Royce and Porsche), to display their latest supercars alongside the pageant of owner-driven vintage vehicles.

Courtesy of Sydney Harbour Concours d’Elegance

On Sunday, Robb Report’s Editor-in-Chief Horacio Silva treated guests to a special preview of the winners of this our annual Car of the Year awards, showcased in our coming March 2025 issue. Our lips are sealed.

Courtesy of Sydney Harbour Concours d’Elegance

To learn how to become a member of our exclusive new community, visit Citizen Kanebridge.

Thank you to the following sponsors: Whisky and Wealth, Jacob & Co, Wine Selectors, Mulpha, Jackson Teece, Young Henry’s and Resup.

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Patron’s New Ultra-Premium Tequila Is a Reposado Blend That Punches Way Above Its Age

Patron’s latest luxury tequila is a blend of ages.

By Jonah Flicker 13/03/2025

There are certain categories in the tequila world that indicate how long the spirit has been matured, so what happens when you combine a few of them together into one release? Patron is the latest brand to get in on this multiple-maturation blending action with the new high-end El Alto release, a combination of tequilas aged for different lengths of time.

In the whisky world, an age statement represents the minimum age of the liquid that’s in the bottle—in other words, a 10-year-old scotch may have liquid much older than that in the blend, but 10 years represents the minimum age. When it comes to tequila, there are also rules in regards to how it has to be labelled based on maturation, and like whisky that depends on the youngest liquid in the blend. The core of El Alto is an extra anejo tequila (the exact proportion isn’t revealed), meaning it was aged for a minimum of three years. But master distiller David Rodriguez decided to blend some anejo (aged one to three years) and reposado (two months to one year) tequila into the mix as well, making this an expression that is defined as reposado instead of extra anejo even though it has some ultra-aged liquid in the blend.

According to the brand, 11 different types of barrels were used to mature the tequila in El Alto, with the majority being hybrid barrels consisting of American oak bodies and French oak heads—each type of wood is thought to impart different flavours into the spirit. “The tequilas that harmoniously come together in Patron El Alto are a result of selecting the finest 100 percent Weber blue agave in the highest parts of Jalisco, Mexico, a territory known for producing the sweetest agaves,” said Rodriguez in a statement. “We took four years to focus on only the best of the best and perfect the bold, sweet flavors of this expression the right way: naturally.”

This type of multi-aged tequila seems to be part of a growing trend, with a few other brands releasing similar high-end expressions including Cincoro and Volcan de Mi Tierra. Perhaps it’s a way of stretching supplies or a tactic to get consumers to dip their toes (or tongues, preferably) into another luxe tequila, a category that is growing every year.

This month Australians are getting an exclusive taste of the El Alto as this formerly USA-exclusive release is launching here with The Bacardi Group. You can find El Alto in selected hospitality venues and at Barrel & Batch for $298 as these chic spots that represent the “pinnacle of celebrating momentous occasions,” according to the brand.

 

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Neutral, Not Boring: How to Wear This Season’s Most Stylish New Menswear

The soft tones of California’s Joshua Tree provide a perfect backdrop for the season’s refined yet relaxed vibe.

By Naomi Rougeau And Alex Badia 04/03/2025

Amid spring 2025’s myriad trends, there was one connecting element: colour. From Alessandro Sartori’s rusty hues at Zegna to Loro Piana’s subdued neutrals, the palette was more sun-bleached than saturated, and the muted tones of California’s Joshua Tree provide a perfect backdrop for the season’s refined yet relaxed vibe.

Stylists Naomi Rougeau and Alex Badia, teamed up with photographer Brad Torchia to create these casual looks that turn a bold statement into a confident whisper.

Brad Torchia

Berluti leather jacket, $14,067; L.B.M. 1911 merino crewneck, $450; Dolce & Gabbana linen trousers, $1,921; Zenith 37 mm Chronomaster Revival in steel, $13,987.

Photo: Brad Torchia

Umit Benan silk jacket, silk shirt, and linen trousers, all prices upon request; Dolce & Gabbana suede loafers, $1600; Girard-Perregaux 38 mm Laureato Sage Green in steel, $23,954.

Photo: Brad Torchia

Brunello Cucinelli linen shirt, $1500; Loro Piana linen trousers, $908; Zenith 37 mm Chronomaster Revival in steel, $13,987.

Photo: Brad Torchia

Anderson & Sheppard cotton jacket, $4,421; Gabriela Hearst cashmere turtleneck, $1,430; Louis Vuitton cotton jeans, $2n138; Tod’s suede sneakers, $1438.

Photo: Brad Torchia

Canali wool, silk, and linen tweed blazer, $4,011; Thom Sweeney silk shirt, $876; Paul Smith mohair trousers, $908; Church’s patent-leather loafers, $1,768; Parmigiani Fleurier 40 mm Tonda PF Micro-Rotor No Date Golden Siena in steel and platinum, $40,675.

Photo: Brad Torchia

Paul Smith cotton trench, $3528; Ferragamo cashmere sweater, $1,752, and cotton trousers, $4389; Dolce & Gabbana suede loafers, $1599.

Photo: Brad Torchia

Hermès denim shirt, $1,647, and belted cotton chinos, $1,366.

Photo: Brad Torchia

Loro Piana cotton cardigan, $4,381, and linen shirt, $1,768; Todd Snyder linen trousers, $639; Zegna Triple Stitch leather sneakers, $1,768; Morgenthal Frederics sunglasses, $2,564; Berluti silk scarf, $1,221; Parmigiani Fleurier 40 mm Tonda PF Micro-Rotor No Date Golden Siena in steel and platinum, $40,675.

Photo: Brad Torchia

Thom Sweeney cashmere and merino sweater, $956; Brunello Cucinelli linen shorts, $1045; Manolo Blahnik raffia and leather loafers, $1,438.; Leisure Society sunglasses, $1905; Zenith 37 mm Chronomaster Revival in steel, $13,987.

Photo: Brad Torchia

Kiton jean jacket, $6061; Officine Générale cashmere sweater, $932; Brioni wool trousers, $1,768; Ralph Lauren Purple Label leather belt, $562; Morgenthal Frederics sunglasses, $52081; Zenith 37 mm Chronomaster Revival in steel, $13,987

 

 

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This New York Jewellery Gallery Is Offering up a Treasure Trove of Vintage Watches

The Mahnaz Collection’s first formal collection of timepieces will include rare finds with fascinating histories

By Paige Reddinger 04/03/2025

There was a period when Mahnaz Ispahani Bartos found it hard to hold on to a watch. The prominent collector and dealer often would post pictures on social media of the uncommon, sculptural timepieces she purchased for herself. But every time, clients of her eponymous jewellery gallery—New York City’s Mahnaz Collection—would hound her into selling them.

“They found those photographs, and they are just diligent in bothering me,” she says with a laugh, adding that some would simply persist until she changed her mind about letting them go.

In response to that demand, this month her Madison Avenue space will begin offering its first formal collection of unique watches, curated with the same rigor and studious eye Ispahani Bartos has applied to sourcing rare jewellery. (Her specialty is the hard-to-find fare made by artists, designers, goldsmiths, and architects.) One coveted example is a gold-and-diamond pendant watch handmade by the late Italian-born avant-garde designer Andrew Grima, whose work was beloved by the British royal family. This example from his historic collaboration with Omega was made in the 1970s. Lesser known but no less noteworthy is the Spanish designer Augustin Julia-Plana, who created a gold-and-jadeite watch for his brand Schlegel & Plana, also in the ’70s. “He was a great jeweller and watch designer,” says Ispahani Bartos of Julia-Plana, who penned striking and visually creative work for everyone from Chopard to Tiffany. “He specialised in really unusual stones,” she adds, noting that he died far too young at age 41.

An 18-carat gold and jadeite watch designed by Augustin Julia-Plana, circa 1970.
Photographed by Janelle Jones/Styled by Stephanie Yeh

Ispahani Bartos knows something about legacy. Born in Bangladesh—when it was still called East Pakistan—she grew up in a culture steeped in traditions of wearing and appreciating jewellery. She recalls her grandmother giving her earrings made from yellow gold, turquoise, diamonds, and Burmese rubies at age 7. (Too young to wear them, she put them on her dolls’ ears for safekeeping. Both were lost when her family fled the violence of the country’s 1971 revolution; the ship carrying their belongings, she says, was sunk by an enemy carrier.)

When she was a teenager, her mother gifted her one of Omega’s Grima-designed watches, which she still owns. That early introduction to rare design influenced her own collecting journey, which turned into her full-time job when she opened her gallery in 2013.

“I didn’t focus on watches then, but increasingly, where I have an important jewellery collection where the jeweller also made watches, I started to feel like, ‘How can I not have that person’s watches?’ ” she says.
From left: Omega and Andrew Grima Winter Sunset pendant watch in 18-karat yellow gold, smokey quartz, and citrine crystal with Swiss manual-wind movement, circa 1968; Piaget bracelet watch in 18-karat yellow gold and tiger’s eye with Swiss manual-wind movement, circa 1970.
Photographed by Janelle Jones/Styled by Stephanie Yeh

That comprehensive approach befits Ispahani Bartos’s previous career and intellectual curiosity. After earning a Ph.D. in international relations, she served as a foreign- and security-policy expert for an array of global organisations, including the Ford Foundation and the Council on Foreign Relations.

She still employs the deep preparation she once used in the aid of diplomacy, researching every piece that comes into her hands, creating extensive and beautiful catalogs for the collections, and crafting museum-style exhibitions to present them to collectors. And this work, she says, takes ages. She’ll soon debut an Italian collection whose catalog she has been researching and preparing for nearly a decade, and her vault currently houses some Ettore Sottsass–designed watches she has been holding back for the right moment. “We tend to build collections all the time, collections we don’t show for years,” she says. Which means you never know what pieces might be hiding in the Mahnaz Collection—or the yet-to-be-told stories that may accompany them.
At top from far left: Omega De Ville Emerald bracelet watch designed by Andrew Grima in sterling silver with a tropical dial; Patek Philippe Golden Ellipse in 18-karat gold; Jaeger-LeCoultre Mystery watch in 18-carat gold and diamonds; Cazzaniga watch in 18-carat gold, diamonds, and sapphires with movement by Piaget; Gilbert Albert watch in platinum, 18-carat gold, and diamonds with movement by Omega. The pieces, made between the 1950s and ’70s, all have Swiss-made manual-wind movements. 

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Penfolds Saves Best For Last with Show-Stopping Release with Creative Partner NIGO

Penfolds has just dropped their limited-edition 65F by NIGO Cabernet Sauvignon Shiraz, a mouthwatering wine you need to nab now.

By Belinda Aucott-christie 28/02/2025

Though Penfolds holds many wonderful wines in its star-studded suite, their latest collaboration with NIGO is earmarked as a sure-fire collector’s item.

Retailing for $395 a bottle, the Penfolds 65F by NIGO is expected to sit snugly alongside the likes of Grange and Bin 389 as a standout single-vintage wine connoisseurs will vie for in years to come.

This prize wine isn’t just delicious and highly collectible, it looks the part. It features branding by artistic director and creative visionary NIGO, the founder of cult streetwear brands A Bathing Ape and Human Made, a pal of Pharrell Williams and current creative director of French fashion house Kenzo. For the box and packaging NIGO was inspired by the towering 65-foot chimney that prevails over Penfolds South Australian home, Magill Estate.

Penfolds archival material served as NIGO’s inspiration for the inclusions within the gift box and on the wine label. A chalkboard wine tag with coinciding chalk pencil pays homage to the chalk boards used in the original working winery at Penfolds Magill Estate and allows the opportunity for personalisation of the wine if used as a gift. The bottle label features a design which takes inspiration from the pressed bottle labels from the 1930-50s, and the tissue paper wrapping the bottle has been adapted from the Penfolds logo style used in the early 20th century. NIGO’s signature playful design style is emphasised with a chimney smoke wine stopper.

Inside it’s a classic embodiment of the way South Australian winemakers blend cabernet sauvignon with shiraz to stunning effect.

As a result this wine has a mouth-watering palate with plenty of fine grain tannins and silky mouth feel. A nose enriched with spicy nutmeg, cardamom and cassis is layered over blueberry compote and lush fig on a palate. There’s lots of blueberry soufflé, gamey tones and just a hint of fennel seed, with more complexity to come as the years fly by.

All the base wines were sourced from grapes grown in South Australia’s top wine regions of Coonawarra, Barossa Valley, McLaren Vale and Clare Valley. And while the 65F by NIGO Cabernet Sauvignon Shiraz is being released now, it will continue to reward cellaring for years to come.

Penfolds first announced NIGO as its Creative Partner in June 2023, with the global release of One by Penfolds. This was closely followed by the launch of Grange by NIGO (the first takeover of Penfolds flagship red wine) in February 2024, followed by Holiday Designed by NIGO in October 2024.A classic for the ages.

Penfolds 65F by NIGO Cabernet Sauvignon Shiraz 2021 is available globally from Thursday 27 February 2025 (RRP AUD$395.00 for 750ml). Available via Penfolds.com, at select Dan Murphy’s stores nationally and select independent retailers.

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