
Sorry, Members Only
Welcome to the new private clubs in Australia, where the tables are reserved but the company is not.
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At an exclusive lunch last November at Montalto, the hatted restaurant and winery in Victoria’s Mornington Peninsula, an assortment of movers and shakers gathered to break bread. Jostling for the award-winning local fare and wines were various captains of industry, creatives and technocrats—exhibiting a divergence that beggared belief.
During one exchange, a former chief executive of one of Australia’s largest blue-chip companies conferred with a competitive poker player, a punk-musician-cum-music-impresario, a renowned writer, a powerbroker and a retired-SAS-member-turned-security-expert for high-risk companies and families. It was the kind of ragtag collision generally reserved for mega charity galas (“Lady Gaga, have you met Jeff Bezos and Stephen Hawking?”), however, guests were not there for anything as infra dig as a PR-driven event but the launch of a new private club called EMT.
Short for “entertainment, media and technology”, EMT bills itself as a trans-Pacific club with forthcoming locations in various Australian and American cities for bon vivants who appreciate world-class luxury offerings but crave privacy and meaningful contact with consonant people. Founded by Trent Blackett—a lawyer and business manager for Chris Hemsworth et al—EMT is planning bucolic locations in Victoria, Far North Queensland, California and New Jersey, monthly events and to cap its membership to a few hundred people. It’s also probably the only club in the world with its own merchant bank.
Also seeking to offer a halo of exclusivity and unrivalled networking is Soho House Sydney, the first local instalment of the storied club and restaurant chain which birthed on London’s Greek Street in 1995 and has since emigrated to all corners of the globe. Word is that native socialites and creatives have been hungrily foraging charter memberships since news first broke in 2023 of a location on Crown Street, with a members-only restaurant, bar and spa. Neighbours were less thrilled and their protests have stalled progress for now—or until they all receive free invites.
For its part, Clarence Street Vault in Sydney’s CBD doesn’t boast a bank or even international chapters, but it is affiliated with Berrima Vault House—a heritage hospitality and private club in New South Wales’ Southern Highlands—with two more locations slated for the coming year. Vault House promises its members sophisticated socialising in a subterranean environment that is far removed from the stuffy, mahogany-lined private haunts of yore.
Located in a former electrical substation, it comes with its own bespoke concierge and features a cavernous event space next door, a co-share workspace, cafe and private dining room. In a city mushrooming with after-hours drinking holes, it also has a rocking late-night speakeasy that can also be cordoned off for ultra-exclusive small gatherings. Meet you at the bar.
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