Room Service
35 E. 21st St., between Broadway and Park Ave. S.; 212-254-5709; opens September 15.
Chris Reda and Mike Romer of the short-lived Rock Candy are banking on a novel gimmick to revive their old space: Off a main room accommodating thirteen tables are nine curtained-off rooms that range from a ten-by-ten-foot standard to the fifteen-by-twenty-foot
"presidential suite"; each of these auxiliary spaces can be rented for $350 to $800 per evening and are attended by waiters dressed like Bellboys who are ready to deliver a bottle, a brewski, some comfort food, or any other edible your heart desires. (Just give the concierge 24 hours to stock up.) Those who don't think a cubicle with a DVD player, a minibar, and a drawer full of condoms, toothpaste, and Snickers bars is the height of sexiness can slip out through a sliding door to the adjoining gents' club Tens.
Star Lounge
222 W. 23rd St., between Seventh and Eighth Aves.; 212-255-4646; opens in October.
The Chelsea-in-the-Hamptons trend reverses when the perennial East End hot spot Star Lounge takes over the space under the Chelsea Hotel currently occupied by Serena. Owners Charles Ferri and Vekrum Kaushik have enlisted designer Heidar Sedeki to give the two rooms a respectively modern and classical feel. House-hip-hop D.J.'s Cassidy, D Nice, and Sky Nellor are expected to spin for a strictly guest-list crowd.
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Studio B
259 Banker St., between Meserole and Calyer Sts., Greenpoint, Brooklyn; 718-389-1880; clubstudiob.com; opens September 21.
The rockers behind the Delancey and Studio A in Miami have commandeered a onetime Polish nightclub on the outskirts of Greenpoint and are using its over-the-top lights and smoke machines, industrial flavor, and gigantic dance floor for live performances (promoter Todd P. brought the Black Dice to a pre-opening party) and D.J. nights curated by Justine D. (of Motherfucker). In addition to a raised VIP lounge with leather couches overlooking the stage, an intimate, bordello-esque side room hosts its own spinners.
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TENJUNE
26 Little West 12th St., between Ninth Ave. and Washington St.; 646-624-2410; tenjunenyc.com; opens September 6.
Diddy has already graced the D.J. booth; Janet Jackson, the private VIP bathroom. Even after Fashion Week has ended, it won't be easy to get past the doorman and into the new lounge from Eugene Remm of Level V and Mark Birnbaum. Located beneath the luxury steakhouse STK, the small horseshoe-shaped dance floor is surrounded by two tiers of tables and a D.J.-performance stage. A leather bar, marble accents, zebra-print tables, and a velvet-rich Purple Room are sure to give nearby Double Seven a run for its money.
Ultra
37 W. 26th St., between Broadway and Sixth Ave.; opens September 28.
Sure, the Chelsea debut of Tommy Tardie of Fuelray boasts a VIP room, but it's the VIP "tree house" that sells it. The structure, which fits 30 people and is raised two flights above the main room, is bedecked with flowers and ivy and has volume controls for those who want to turn up the house music. (There will be nights of classics and eighties tunes, too.) Entrance to the main room, which sports an 80-foot-wide projection wall, will be limited mostly to members, so don't get too thirsty for cocktails created by mixologist Stefan Trummer of Bouley and Masa.
The Volstead
125 E. 54th St., between Lexington and Park Aves.; 212-532-7474; opens late October.
The operators behind Tribe, Vig 27, and Punch and Judy are bringing the formula that has made their Park Avenue South restaurant-lounge PS 450 successful to the subterranean midtown space vacated by Light. Mahogany and dark-cherry woods will emit a speakeasy feel in honor of namesake Andrew Volstead, the teetotaling congressman behind Prohibition. Older business lunchers are expected to cede to younger professionals who'll come later in the night for D.J.'s, brown-liquor cocktails, and tapas.



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