Club Hue will open in Los Angeles' Koreatown in June 2026 with an initiation structure explicitly designed to connect Korean diaspora wealth and Pan-Asian executives to US real estate and hospitality networks. The club confirmed an $1,850 annual membership with a $2,500 initiation fee, pricing below Soho House's LA properties but targeting a narrower demographic: family offices managing cross-Pacific allocations and hospitality operators scouting franchise beachheads.
The venue occupies 12,000 square feet across two floors on Western Avenue, with the second floor dedicated to co-working and private dining rather than traditional club lounges. Founding partners include Korean-American hospitality veterans who previously held roles at Equinox and Nobu properties, according to planning documents. The operational model borrows from Seoul's members-only wellness clubs—facilities built around specific professional networks rather than neighborhood access—and pairs it with US licensing structures that allow event revenue without liquor-primary classification.
The timing matters because seventeen new private clubs have announced US openings since January 2024, but only three explicitly position themselves as diaspora-to-homeland connectors rather than neighborhood amenities. Club Hue's structure allows Korean nationals to hold memberships while maintaining US visitor status, a detail that addresses a recurring friction point for family offices rotating executives between Seoul and California markets. The club also negotiates reciprocal access with clubs in Seoul, Tokyo, and Hong Kong—partnerships that hospitality consultants estimate add $400-$600 in effective annual value for members who travel monthly.
Koreatown represents the densest concentration of Korean-owned commercial real estate outside Seoul, with $3.2 billion in property transactions recorded between 2019 and 2023. Family offices managing those assets have limited neutral ground for due diligence meetings; existing clubs in West Hollywood and Downtown LA cater to entertainment and finance verticals respectively. Club Hue's co-working floor offers the same function as Singapore's private club model: deal rooms positioned as social space, avoiding the regulatory overhead of formal business centers while still offering Bloomberg terminals and translation services.
Operators should watch whether Club Hue's membership converts at the 40% rate its financial model assumes; most clubs targeting ethnic professional networks see 22-28% conversion from inquiry to paid membership, according to hospitality advisory firm Horwath HTL. If Hue meets projections, expect four to six copycat structures in Houston, Seattle, and Vancouver by mid-2027—cities with comparable Korean commercial property density. The club's liquor license application also tests whether California will approve membership models that explicitly prioritize non-resident applicants, a regulatory question with implications for how international wealth accesses US hospitality infrastructure.
Club Hue begins accepting founding memberships in August 2025, with plans to cap initial cohort at 850 members before opening day.