Vanta will open a 16,000-square-foot members-only club across two levels of MacDonald House in December, following a S$30 million renovation of the 1949 British colonial structure on Orchard Road. The project marks the first major private-club insertion into Singapore's Gazetted conservation inventory since The Straits Club reconfigured Armenian Street in 2019.
MacDonald House—originally the British High Commission, site of the 1965 bombing that killed three during Konfrontasi—sits on 99-year State lease with Approved Conservation status under URA's Orchard Planning Area. Vanta's entry follows S$18 million in structural works completed by building owner Roxy-Pacific Holdings between 2021 and 2023, which installed MEP infrastructure capable of supporting F&B and late-night licensing. The club occupies floors previously vacant since the British Council withdrew operations in 2016.
The timing aligns with three parallel moves. Capitol Kempinski's S$45 million members' annexe opens Q1 2025 with 12,000 square feet and a S$50,000 initiation fee. Raffles Hotel's Long Bar Annexe completes its S$22 million private-dining conversion in February. Soho House, which began Singapore diligence in late 2023, is evaluating three Tanjong Pagar shophouse clusters for a 2026 entry. Singapore now counts 34 active private clubs with initiation fees above S$10,000, up from 19 in 2019. Median initiation at the top decile: S$38,000, a 40 percent increase since pre-pandemic pricing.
The shift into conservation stock changes the cost structure. Traditional club builds in purpose-designed towers—One Raffles Place, Marina Bay Financial Centre—run S$1,200 to S$1,600 per square foot all-in. Heritage conversions with URA oversight, façade retention requirements, and original-fenestration mandates push that to S$1,875 per square foot minimum. Vanta's S$30 million outlay translates to S$1,875 per square foot before FF&E, implying another S$8 million to S$10 million in furnishings and art if the club follows Straits Club's 40 percent fit-out ratio. For context: that per-square-foot figure exceeds the S$1,680 Rosewood spent on its Bangkok club rooms and matches Aman's Tokyo renovation rate.
Operators and allocators should track three follow-on effects. First, whether Vanta's structure includes equity membership—Straits Club and The Craftsmen both issued 500 founder shares at S$50,000 each, creating a S$25 million balance-sheet cushion before operational revenue. Second, URA's next Gazetted conservation release in Q2 2025 will clarify whether more British High Commission–era buildings in the Orchard corridor become available for similar conversions; four additional properties on the 2023 update list have diplomatic or Commonwealth history. Third, Soho House's Singapore structure—local partner versus wholly owned—will set the template for international club brands entering a market where foreign ownership in conservation buildings requires Ministerial approval under the Residential Property Act, even for commercial use.
MacDonald House's Orchard Road frontage and MRT accessibility (Somerset station, 280 meters) give Vanta the same catchment advantage that drove The Straits Club to 92 percent occupancy within 18 months of opening. The club's December launch lands in Singapore's highest-yield quarter for luxury hospitality—average November-January occupancy at five-star properties runs 89 percent, and corporate entertainment budgets reset. Roxy-Pacific, which paid S$86 million for MacDonald House in 2015, will now collect what market observers estimate at S$2.1 million annually in base rent, assuming a 7 percent yield on the club's fit-out cost.
The 16,000 square feet positions Vanta in the mid-tier by footprint—larger than August Hall's 9,000 but smaller than The Craftsmen's 22,000. Members-only venue construction in Singapore has now absorbed S$340 million in capital since 2020, not counting Raffles and Capella club-within-hotel annexes. That figure will cross S$500 million by end-2025 if Soho House and two unnamed Hong Kong club operators complete their reported site acquisitions.