Zero Bond Private Members Club Opens in Wynn Las Vegas

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Zero Bond Private Members Club Opens in Wynn Las Vegas

  • Zero Bond, the exclusive New York City private members’ club, debuts at Wynn Las Vegas on March 10.
  • The venue features a central salon, four bars, multiple lounges, a cigar room with personalized humidors, private gaming salons, a boardroom, and a penthouse level overlooking the golf course.
  • Sartiano’s, an Italian restaurant overseen by three-time James Beard Award winner Alfred Portale, is located adjacent to Zero Bond.

Zero Bond, the New York City private members’ club founded by hospitality impresario Scott Sartiano in 2020, will open its second outpost on March 10 at the Wynn Las Vegas.

Members arrive through a private motor court tucked beside Wynn’s Fairway Villas, along the resort’s 18-hole golf course. Inside, the space feels less like a club and more like a Milanese palazzo. A central salon anchors the club, and from there, a series of rooms unfold: four bars at varying scales, lounges that shift from power-lunch calm to evening glow, a cigar room with personalized humidors, private gaming salons, a boardroom, and a penthouse level overlooking the golf course.

“Les Mariés Sous Le Baldaquin” (The Bride and Groom Under the Canopy) by Marc Chagall at Zero Bond at Wynn Las Vegas.

Robert Miller/Wynn Las Vegas


“The initial emotional response should be relaxation and comfort,” says Todd-Avery Lenahan, president and chief creative officer of Wynn Design & Development. The club, which has built its reputation on privacy, has strict rules: no photos, no approaching fellow members for selfies, and no broadcasting what happens inside.

Zero Bond boasts some serious art credentials, too. The first thing members see in the salon is a Renoir painting above the fireplace. Across the room hangs a 19th-century portrait by French artist Marie Félix Hippolyte-Lucas, its restrained elegance forming a classical foil to the Renoir. Nearby, a contemporary work by Mexican artist Jorge Pardo pulls the room firmly into the present. These are clearly not decorative artworks selected to match the upholstery. It is a museum-grade exhibition curated in partnership with Heather James Fine Art, comprising 37 works, including five sculptures installed inside and throughout the outdoor garden.

The Sculpture Garden at Zero Bond.

Robert Miller/Wynn Las Vegas


According to the gallery, the collection totals roughly $40 million in value, with pieces ranging from under $10,000 to nearly $5 million. Every work is available for acquisition via discreet QR codes placed beside the art. (If something sells, it will be replaced.)

Curator Chip Tom describes the collection as a conversation across centuries. Outside, sculptures by Joan Miró, Jim Dine, and Robert Indiana punctuate the garden, while a reflective stainless-steel work captures both the golf course and the Sphere in its mirrored surface.

But the art reveals just one dimension of the venue. At the bar, the house martini arrives cold, with a spoonful of what looks like caviar but turns out to be spherified black truffle essence. It bursts saline and decadent on the palate. The beverage program, led by Mariena Mercer Boarini, is polished and exacting without veering into theatrics. The bar snacks carry a distinct Las Vegas wink—the crisp chicken nugget is topped with caviar.

Palmyra by Valerie Jaudon.

Robert Miller/Wynn Las Vegas


Next door is Sartiano’s, an Italian restaurant open to the public and overseen by three-time James Beard Award winner Alfred Portale, with chef Michael Rubinstein leading day-to-day operations. The dining room hums with old-school glamour: tailored banquettes, dark woods, prime cuts, and classic pastas.

At Zero Bond, dining is drawn from the same Portale-led kitchen. Members can order breakfast, lunch, or dinner nearly anywhere—in the salon, at the bar, or on the terrace overlooking the links. The Fairway Grill offers reservable seating with its own menu and a view almost too European for the Nevada desert—think manicured fairway and a curated sculpture garden.

Upstairs, the penthouse level functions as a private living room for major sporting events and intimate dinners, complete with a poker room. Downstairs, Disco Bey Bey, a compact late-night room, delivers a chic space for after-hours entertainment.

Membership for Zero Bond at Wynn Las Vegas starts with a $1,000 initiation fee and $2,750 in annual dues. Meanwhile, the founding tier—priced at $50,000 initiation and $7,500 annually—includes reciprocal access to the Manhattan location and expanded privileges. Membership has been quietly curated for more than a year—a deliberate mix of global names and locals.

“The foundation of Zero Bond’s community DNA is the locals,” Sartiano says. “Otherwise you’re just another place on the Strip.”

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