Gulf News

San Francisco likes invitation-only clubs

It is yet another indicator of a city where wealth created by the technology sector casts a wide influence

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n a sunny afternoon in the main lounge of the Battery in San Francisco, with its soaring ceilings and provocativ­e contempora­ry art, an AfricanAme­rican woman sat on the edge of a sofa typing on her laptop. Nearby, two middleaged white men in dark blazers engaged a small group in business conversati­on. Across the room, an Asian man in his 20s perused his smartphone.

Although it looked like an upscale hotel lobby, those assembled were actually hand-picked: The Battery is an invitation-only private social club. It is one of a burst of recently opened private clubs that have arrived with the city’s latest tech-fuelled boom, further signalling San Francisco’s transition from its flowersin-the-hair past to a community comfortabl­e with velvet stanchions.

But as the scene at the Battery revealed, these are not the mostly white, well-todo gentlemen’s clubs of yore. The new clubs welcome all genders and races, and one does not need to be extraordin­arily wealthy to join. The Battery’s dues are $2,400 a year, about the same as a highend gym membership. Rates are similar at other newer clubs.

Michael Birch, the Battery’s co-founder, said that cultivatin­g a diverse membership, both ethnically and culturally, had been a focus since opening in 2013. “We’re getting better and better at bringing in members who add value,” Birch said.

The club’s membership has grown to 4,800 today from an initial 1,400 in its 58,000-square-foot converted warehouse space, he said, making it the largest of the newer clubs. Even though Birch made his fortune by selling his website Bebo to AOL for a reported $850 million in 2008, he and his wife, Xochi, reached beyond their circle of tech colleagues into the realms of art and music for the initial membership list, inspired, they said, by London’s private social clubs.

Now, existing members recommend who joins next, and applicants must go through several rounds of screening interviews. To become a member, it helps to be interestin­g.

Roh Habibi, a member of the Battery and a real estate agent who was a star of Bravo TV’s Million Dollar Listing San Francisco, appreciate­s the variety of people he meets at the club. He said it was as if the membership criterion were “Would I feel happy meeting you?”

Other new clubs are more tech-centric. Modernist opened last year in the 3,000 square foot space of a defunct restaurant near the Embarcader­o waterfront, and the co-founder Albert Chen said his initial members were friends, many of them working in technology, his former profession. The club’s website describes the membership as a “Community of Accomplish­ed Founders, C-Level, Venture Industry and Friends”.

“San Francisco has a lot of tech people,” Chen said. “If we were in LA, it would be a lot of entertainm­ent people.”

Members can work in the space during the afternoons, and events include talks on abstruse subjects like cryptocurr­encies. But apparently, above all, the Modernist members enjoy imbibing — the club employs a veteran mixologist, and the walls are lined with members’ personal caches of liquors, some secured with biometric locks.

Expansion

Chen said the club had 500 members and it would open a second location near the city’s Pyramid tower this year, two blocks from another in the new wave of clubs, Wingtip, a retail space and membership club that promotes itself as “not a bunch of guys in a steam room talking about what a raw deal Prohibitio­n was”. That quip is aimed at the city’s old elite gentlemen’s clubs, some dating from the Gold Rush — places like the Bohemian Club and the Pacific Union Club. Charles Fracchia, a local historian and author, has studied the older clubs and calls them a classic example of “the associatio­nal principle”. As cities expanded, he said, like-minded people started clubs based on their shared interests. The Bohemian Club, for example, was created by journalist­s and artists.

“People like to hang out together,” Fracchia said. “We see this in every aspect of life.”

Over the decades, however, many of the older clubs evolved into bastions of privilege and exclusivit­y. To belong became “a feather in your cap,” said Fracchia, putting status above the clubs’ original missions.

And while some of the new clubs might see themselves as an alterative to that elitism, the truth is that many of the newer clubs’ members would not be readily accepted at the old if they wanted to join.

Some of the older clubs still do not admit women, and many have few minorities, waiting lists that are years long and fees that can be tens of thousands of dollars.

Still, in a famously progressiv­e city where millionair­es often drive Priuses and flaunting money is frowned upon, some see little difference between the newer and older clubs — it is just moneyed people excluding others. An essay in The New Yorker criticised the Battery as a troubling sign of the city’s latest surge in wealth. “San Francisco itself is turning into a private, exclusive club,” wrote Anisse Gross.

Perhaps sensitive to this criticism, some newer clubs have embraced philanthro­py. Birch said the Battery and its members had raised $10 million for charity in the past few years, including a recent fundraiser to benefit those affected by nearby wildfires. Other newer clubs unapologet­ically focus on a niche. The baseball-themed Gotham Club is located at the Giants’ ballpark.

 ?? New York Times ?? Inside the Battery, an invitation-only private social club, in San Francisco. A burst of recently opened private clubs have arrived with the city’s latest tech-fueled boom, further signaling San Francisco’s transition from its flowers-in-the-hair past.
New York Times Inside the Battery, an invitation-only private social club, in San Francisco. A burst of recently opened private clubs have arrived with the city’s latest tech-fueled boom, further signaling San Francisco’s transition from its flowers-in-the-hair past.

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