Each of the four suites at Cocktail Club has been redesigned around a single idea: that a well-made drink and a well-considered room share the same DNA. Both reward attention to detail, both depend on the balance of ingredients, and both leave a lasting impression when done right. The concept is playful but the execution is deliberate. Every suite draws its palette, texture, and personality from a different classic cocktail, turning what could be a novelty into something genuinely immersive. The result is a residence that feels curated rather than decorated, where color choices and material selections carry a narrative thread you can follow from the entryway to the bedside.
The four suites each offer their own distinct character and layout, making the property feel more like a collection of private apartments than a uniform rental. Expect thoughtful furnishings, bold design choices, and interiors that reward a closer look. The redesign prioritizes livability alongside aesthetics. Kitchens and communal spaces are outfitted for real use, not just display, and sleeping areas are designed with comfort as the baseline rather than an afterthought. Guests booking the full property have access to all four suites, making it well suited for group travel, celebrations, or creative retreats where everyone wants their own space but a shared sense of place.
The cocktail theme extends beyond the walls. The property leans into the rituals of gathering, mixing, and hosting. Common areas encourage the kind of slow evening that starts with a drink and turns into a conversation that runs long. Whether you arrive as a group already in rhythm or as friends looking for a reason to slow down together, the spaces are designed to facilitate connection without forcing it. The atmosphere is social but unhurried, spirited without being loud.
Cocktail Club is a residence that understands its own identity with uncommon clarity. It does not pretend to be a hotel, a bar, or a design showroom. It is a place where four distinct rooms tell a cohesive story, where the language of mixology becomes a lens for thinking about color, comfort, and the small pleasures of being somewhere that was made with real intention. You leave remembering not just where you stayed, but the specific shade of the walls, the weight of the glassware, the feeling of a place that was designed to be noticed and enjoyed in equal measure.