
Editor's Note: This article has been updated to correctly identify Lady Delilah's business model.
Lady Delilah is getting ready to trade Hollywood hills for cobblestone streets, and it is landing right in the heart of Manhattan nightlife. The h.wood Group has locked in a two-level space in the Meatpacking District for a new Lady Delilah supper club, setting up what is expected to be a high-drama supper club with theatrical dining and live entertainment near the High Line and some of the neighborhood’s biggest retail anchors.
According to New York Business Journal, the h.wood Group signed a 15-year lease with Tavros Holdings for roughly 10,000 square feet at 50 Ninth Avenue to house the Lady Delilah supper club. The Business Journal reports that the Meatpacking address will be Delilah’s fifth location in the country and that the multi-floor footprint is being tailored for late-night dining and live music.
Where it will sit
Commercial Observer first reported the Delilah deal in June 2024 and described the unit as a two-floor, roughly 10,000-square-foot space at the newly redeveloped 50 Ninth property. The building, developed by Tavros, runs along Ninth Avenue between West 14th Street and the High Line and is being marketed as trophy retail space for experience-driven tenants. According to Commercial Observer and the property site, 50 Ninth offers large floorplates and high ceilings that fit supper-club concepts like Delilah that rely on spectacle as much as cuisine.
From L.A. to Dallas
Delilah began in West Hollywood, then started hopping to other big-city hotspots. The brand opened an East Coast outpost in Miami in late 2023, a move announced via PR Newswire, and it debuted in Dallas in early 2026, a splashy entrance that Dallas News reviewed earlier this year. A Meatpacking location would make the Lady Delilah concept the h.wood Group’s fifth Delilah-branded venue in the United States.
What neighbors say
Local owners and brokers are treating the arrival as a statement move for the area’s after-dark economy. “This is a huge step in the right direction for the future of the Meatpacking District,” a local owner told Commercial Observer. Tavros and the 50 Ninth marketing materials pitch the property as a magnet for high-profile retail and hospitality tenants, a positioning that lines up neatly with Delilah’s flash-forward, spectacle-heavy model.
For now, the details are mostly locked up tighter than a Saturday night reservation list. The New York Business Journal did not list an opening date or menu for Lady Delilah, and neither a build-out schedule nor reservation information has been released. As the project moves ahead, eyes will be on city permits, liquor-license filings and official announcements from the h.wood Group or Tavros to see when Meatpacking’s next late-night stage officially opens for business.









