Club + Resort Business

  • Home
  • Course+Grounds
  • Design+Renovation
  • Food+Beverage
  • Golf
  • Management
  • Technology
  • Top Ranked
    • 2022 Top Ranked Racquet Facilities
    • 2022 Aquatics & Pools
    • 2022 Fitness & Wellness Centers
    • 2022 Culinary Experiences
    • Locker Rooms
    • Patios
    • Pro Shops
  • People
  • Resources
    • C+RB Playbooks
      • Culinary Playbook
      • Kitchen Equipment and Design Playbook
      • Maintenance Employees Playbook
    • Digital Issues
    • ECM Awards
    • FAQ
    • Leaders in Clubs + Resorts
    • Podcasts
    • Sponsored Content
    • 2022 Club + Resort Business Leadership
    • Videos
      • The Road Ahead/The Road Back
      • Unboxing Videos
    • Webinars
      • Membership Marketing Webinar Series

Utah Readies for New Private Social Club

By C&RB Staff | May 23, 2022

Brothers George Cardon-Bystry and Charlie Cardon are targeting September for the opening of the Edison House in Salt Lake City, Utah. The 30,000-sq.-ft. club will house a fitness center, a theater, a rooftop bar that borders a swimming pool, a piano lounge and a karaoke bar. “We are looking to build a community that really embraces diversity in the truest sense,” says Lauren Boyack, the club’s head of membership.

The Edison House, a new private social club in Salt Lake City, Utah, is accepting applications and encouraging people to sign up even though there were 3,000 people on the waiting list, The Salt Lake Tribune reported. The club is targeting a September opening date.

“We plan to open with a thousand members, but we feel strongly that the operation could support a much larger member community,” said Lauren Boyack, the club’s head of membership. “We just want to make sure we’re firing on all cylinders operationally when we open our doors on day one. But we will have the opportunity to grow beyond that thousand.”

Memberships run $225 per month, plus a $500 onboarding fee, The Tribune reported. Spouses and partners can be added to the membership for an additional $100 per month, with a $100 onboarding fee, and members can bring two people with them per visit. The club also is offering some discounted sponsored memberships, for those unable to afford the full membership fee.

Edison House is the project of brothers George Cardon-Bystry and Charlie Cardon, eighth-generation Utahns who have spent time in larger cities and wanted to bring a more metropolitan vibe to downtown Salt Lake City, The Tribune reported. That’s balanced out by the deliberate use of the word “house” in the club’s name—the brothers said they want to create a “home away from home” for members.

The 30,000-sq.-ft. club will house a fitness center, a theater, a rooftop bar that borders a swimming pool, a piano lounge and a karaoke bar, The Tribune reported. Also in the works are concerts, lectures, and film screenings and drag brunches on the roof. There will also be off-site events, like hikes and picnics.

“We also have an absolutely gorgeous performance venue [called Speakeasy], which is where we’ll be hosting lots of events,” Boyack said. “We always talk about Edison House and how to support it in three parts. The community is key; the clubhouse is amazing, and then the third leg of that stool will be experiences.”

The club has hired a full-time programming director, who will schedule events using that performance space, Boyack told The Tribune.

The club recently hired Zachary Willey as its executive chef, The Tribune reported. Wiley was the chef and owner of Pallet, the atmospheric restaurant that received many accolades during its nine-year run, but closed during the pandemic.

Willey will oversee the club’s two restaurants: Society, a higher-end venue on the first floor, and Atrium Bar and Grill on the second floor, which is more casual, The Tribune reported. He’ll also be in charge of the bars in both restaurants, as well as the one on the rooftop pool deck and the one inside Speakeasy.

Boyak said the Edison House model isn’t the cigars-and-plush-chairs club of yore, but more like London’s Soho House—though that’s not a totally parallel comparison, The Tribune reported.

“They focus on purely arts and entertainment professionals,” she said. “We are looking to build a community that really embraces diversity in the truest sense. Member clubs have historically underrepresented women and people of color, and that’s something that we want to control for. So that is part of our process.”

Boyak told The Tribune that in the conversations she’s had so far with potential members, she’s heard that in Salt Lake City, “it can be very difficult to break out of your professional bubble. I think people tend to get kind of siloed in their industry and don’t interact with a lot of people outside of that workplace. So we really want to represent all different professional backgrounds as well.”

Edison House has already sent out an early round of invitations, The Tribune reported

“It’s a very brief 5-to-7-minute application, where you talk a little bit about yourself—what your interests are, what you hope to get out of the club, all that good stuff,” Boyack said. “Then you’ll be contacted by a member of our membership committee to do a brief interview, and that’s really the entire process. …

“We’ve discovered over the last few months of networking and meeting people and offering them the opportunity to apply, there’s no substitute for meeting someone,” she said. “You can ask all the detailed questions you want on the application, but until you sit down with someone, it’s hard to get a true sense of who they are.”

Tell Us What You Think! Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Related Articles Read More >

a gate and overgrown landscape in front of golf course sign
Visual Buffer May Derail Meadowbrook GC Renovation Plans
a fleet of golf carts in front of damaged clubhouse
Insurance Struggle Keeps Black Creek GC from Full Operation
Rendering of fancy resort overlooking a marina
Gaylord Breaks Ground on First West Coast Resort
Vandals fill golf course holes with cement
Climate Activists Vandalize French Golf Course After Water Ban Exemption
Top Ranked Private Club and Resorts

C+RB Newsletter Sign Up

Club and Resort Chef

ClubandresortChef

Club + Resort Talks

July 28, 2022
Capstone Hospitality Helps Clubs Maximize Membership Opportunities
See More >

Club + Resort Business Digital Editions

Club & Resort BusinessBrowse the current issue and archived issues of Club & Resort Business in an easy-to-use, high-quality format. Bookmark, share and interact with the leading club and resort magazine today.



Club + Resort Business
  • About
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise
  • Submit Industry News
  • New Print Subscription
  • Manage Current Print Subscription
  • Email Newsletter Sign Up
  • Club + Resort Chef
  • Club + Resort Chef Association
  • Club + Resort Chef Recipes
  • Chef to Chef Conference

Copyright © 2022 WTWH Media, LLC. All Rights Reserved. Site Map | Privacy Policy | RSS

Search Club + Resort Business

  • Home
  • Course+Grounds
  • Design+Renovation
  • Food+Beverage
  • Golf
  • Management
  • Technology
  • Top Ranked
    • 2022 Top Ranked Racquet Facilities
    • 2022 Aquatics & Pools
    • 2022 Fitness & Wellness Centers
    • 2022 Culinary Experiences
    • Locker Rooms
    • Patios
    • Pro Shops
  • People
  • Resources
    • C+RB Playbooks
      • Culinary Playbook
      • Kitchen Equipment and Design Playbook
      • Maintenance Employees Playbook
    • Digital Issues
    • ECM Awards
    • FAQ
    • Leaders in Clubs + Resorts
    • Podcasts
    • Sponsored Content
    • 2022 Club + Resort Business Leadership
    • Videos
      • The Road Ahead/The Road Back
      • Unboxing Videos
    • Webinars
      • Membership Marketing Webinar Series