New York is getting a high-impact nightlife revival as The h.wood Group prepares to debut its most refined concept yet with “Lady Delilah,” a 10,000-square-foot supper club set to open in Fall 2026 in the Meatpacking District.

Taking over 351 West 14th Street under a 15-year lease with Tavros Holdings, the project introduces a fully immersive, underground dining and entertainment venue, with nearly 9,000 square feet dedicated to the main lower-level experience. The space will house a central dining room, private dining areas, a full stage, and a nightly lineup of live music, dancers, and band performances—repositioning the modern supper club as a fully choreographed, design-driven experience rather than a traditional restaurant format.

The h.wood Group is bringing its next major nightlife concept to New York City this fall.

Image courtesy of the h.wood Group

“Lady Delilah” marks a major evolution of the Delilah brand, which first launched in Los Angeles in 2016 and quickly expanded into key markets including Las Vegas, Dallas, and Miami. Rather than replicating the original concept, this New York iteration has been designed as a standalone identity—leaning into a more restrained, old-world aesthetic rooted in the city’s 1930s Art Deco era. Vintage oak finishes, tiled barrel ceilings, and a subterranean layout create a layered, intimate atmosphere that draws directly from New York’s historic nightlife scene, aiming to bring back a sense of discovery often missing from today’s hospitality landscape.

The move comes at a pivotal moment for the brand as it approaches its 10-year anniversary, signaling a shift from expansion to refinement. In Miami, Delilah has already established itself as one of the city’s most recognizable experience-driven dining destinations, anchoring a growing portfolio of high-energy nightlife and restaurant concepts that prioritize atmosphere, performance, and design just as much as cuisine. That same formula—elevated and reinterpreted—is now being tailored specifically for New York, where competition in the dining and nightlife space demands a sharper point of view.

With deal negotiations brokered by Jason Greenstone of Cushman & Wakefield and Chris DeCrosta of GoodSpace, “Lady Delilah” is positioned to become one of the most closely watched openings in the city’s next wave of hospitality. The concept’s emphasis on intimacy, theatricality, and spatial storytelling signals a broader return to experiential nightlife—one where the environment, the performance, and the energy of the room are just as central as what’s on the plate.