Inside the Modernist, an exclusive club for Silicon Valley's tech elite

To better understand what makes Silicon Valley hum — the energy, the ambition, the money — try scoring an invite to a night at The Modernist, a private social club in downtown San Francisco one block from the water and the city’s famed Ferry Building.

Over 400 members belong to the two-year-old club, a 2,000-plus square-foot space housed in a nondescript building and marked by steel beams, exposed brick, chrome accents and a door entry system with a four-digit passcode that changes daily.

Among the clientele rubbing shoulders over cocktails and tapas-style molecular cuisine: former Evernote CEO Phil Libin, Kabam co-founders Kevin Chou and Holly Liu, and Yuan Yuan Tan, principal dancer at the San Francisco Ballet. Even Elon Musk, Tesla (TSLA) CEO and PayPal (PYPL) co-founder, has wined and dined at The Modernist on occasion.

Modernist exterior
The Modernist is a 2000-square foot private social club housed in a nondescript building in downtown San Francisco. Source: Amir Proushani/Yahoo Finance

The barrier to entry at The Modernist is steep. Members pony up as much as $3,000 a year in fees, although $1,000 of that can be used as credit towards food and drink. Cocktails such as the Yogi Bear – Glen Grant 10 malt scotch, salted caramel, shiitake mushroom and truffle — hover between $12 and $17, while bites like sea bass siu mai and lobster tempura fetch between $11 and $20.

To even be considered for membership, a current club member must recommend the candidate. A candidate also undergoes an interview process, in which one of the club’s employees — from one its co-founders to the bar back — can veto that person as a candidate. The rationale: a strict “no-a**hole policy.”

“What’s most important to us is that our members are fun, friendly, accomplished, they’re respectful, and they’re unpretentious,” Modernist co-founder Albert Chen tells Yahoo Finance.

Modernist Food
The Modernist serves up a number of bites, including sea bass siu mai and lobster tempura. Source: Victor Velasquez/Yahoo Finance

‘It’s the people that are really the content of the club

A club that charges $3,000 a year? That’s pocket change to many of the tech elite, but for just about anyone else, that’s a down payment for a car. Chen, who co-founded The Modernist with entrepreneur Steve Chen and Carlo Splendorini, former corporate bar director of the Mina Group, contends that cash goes towards creating a controlled environment where many career professionals feel comfortable and safe to mingle.

“When you put together the product for anything, whether it’s a community or a tech company, you have to consider all the elements that make that product amazing,” Chen adds. “What makes this place amazing is one, hospitality, and two, the membership. It’s the people that are really the content of the club.”

The Modernist is hardly the only club of its kind on the local tech scene — nor is it even the most popular. The Battery, a San Francisco social club, cost $13.5 million for entrepreneur couple Michael and Xochi Birch to buy and millions more to renovate into a five-floor, architectural marvel. It regularly draws high-flying tech figures such as famed Apple designer Jonathan Ive, Dropbox CEO Drew Houston, former Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer, and former Twitter CEO Dick Costolo, among others.