Dark, atmospheric, and unapologetically cool. The rooftop pool is the most coveted patch of summer in the city.
Soho House Chicago occupies a converted warehouse in the Fulton Market District — Chicago's most dynamic neighbourhood, where Google's Midwest headquarters and a constellation of Michelin-starred restaurants have displaced the old meatpacking operations. The building retains its industrial bones: exposed brick, raw timber, and the kind of ceiling heights that make ordinary furniture look considered. Rooms run from compact singles to generous king bedrooms, each finished with the House's signature mid-century-meets-salvage aesthetic: velvet headboards, vintage prints, mismatched lamps that somehow cohere.
The rooftop pool is the hotel's gravitational centre from May through September — a heated outdoor pool surrounded by sunloungers and cabanas with views across the West Loop skyline. Cecconi's, the Italian restaurant on site, maintains a standard well above the captive-audience expectation; the burrata and the handmade pasta have a following among locals who are not guests. The basement Cowshed Spa offers a compact menu of facials and treatments that take their programme seriously.
The Soho House model operates as a members' club with hotel accommodation. Non-members can book rooms directly and access most hotel amenities, though some spaces are members-only. The practical effect for hotel guests is an atmosphere that never feels like a conventional hotel — the energy is closer to a well-appointed private club that happens to rent rooms. Service is relaxed and competent rather than formal, which suits the neighbourhood and the clientele.
Fulton Market has become the city's highest-concentration nightlife district, with Randolph Street's restaurant row and the surrounding cocktail bars walkable from the front door. A group booking at Soho House — rooftop pool by day, Cecconi's dinner, the West Loop's bar scene on foot — delivers the choreographed luxury-and-access combination that bachelor groups require without any of the Vegas grotesquerie. See all bachelor/bachelorette hotels →
The House model suits the solo traveller who wants energy without exposure — the communal spaces provide company without obligation, and the Cowshed Spa offers genuine restorative programming. Fulton Market's restaurant density means you can eat exceptionally well every night without going more than two blocks. The creative-class atmosphere means a solo traveller blends in and never feels watched. See all solo retreat hotels →
From $175/night. Check availability.
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