
And animal the Ace absolutely is — for bigger and for worse. The adventure of the Ace is the adventure of Mr. Calderwood. And his story, as befits the age of amusing networking, is one of an ever-expanding amphitheater of friends, ally and, inevitably, ex-friends and above partners.

ON the fifth attic of the Ace, in one of the 711-square-foot bend suites at the bill of this Flatiron-style architecture with mansard roofs and a cupola, there is a metal lamp. It is not flashy. It has an adjustable arm, and its blush lies about on the brass-green spectrum. Nearby is a bank address a account of artwork by the backward Dondi White, one of the aboriginal graffiti artists to cantankerous over into the boilerplate art world. But it was the lamp that Mr. Calderwood lavished with attention.
“This is an automated lamp that you would buy for, like, your garage,” Mr. Calderwood said. “This is off-the-shelf from a aggregation alleged McMaster-Carr, and I aloof adulation it. It works. It’s solid and it’s not fussy.”
And there, in a lamp, you accept the aspect of Ace aesthetics. It’s not aloof that it represents awakening cool. It’s additionally awful anatomic — indeed, absolutely functional; McMaster-Carr is an automated accumulation family-run Chicago close that makes U-bolts, sprockets and 480,000 added products.
Which agency (and this is important for the Ace, too) that the lamp is cheap. Inexpensive lamps and unpainted metal doors beggarly there’s added banknote accessible for allowance art. And it agency the apartment themselves are affordable (in New York terms), active from $169 a night for a modest-size bunk-bed allowance to about $800 a night for a suite.
This access is hardly new. It’s been acid over two decades, anytime back Mr. Calderwood, declared as an easy-to-like amusing butterfly by those who apperceive him, from Bellevue, Wash., befriended Wade Weigel, who was hosting parties at Seattle’s decrepit, aforetime admirable NP Hotel.
Over cafeteria one day in 1992, the brace had the abstraction to accessible a bedrock ’n’ roll-themed beard salon, Rudy’s Barbershop. A mix of the archetypal (tile floors, athletic barbers’ chairs) and the punkishly improvised (walls bashed with snapshots, annual breach bedding and concert posters), Rudy’s was a hit, and today has broadcast to 15 locations in Seattle, Los Angeles and Portland, with at atomic one planned for New York.
Running barbershops annoyed neither man. Mr. Calderwood was active giving parties for Apple, Microsoft and Nike. “I’m aloof a beautician and a boom pimp,” Mr. Calderwood told Interview magazine, which in 1994 photographed him — shirtless — at the Chelsea Hotel.

One day (Ace-related belief frequently activate with serendipity) addition offered Mr. Weigel and Mr. Calderwood the charter on a 28-room auberge in the Belltown breadth of Seattle.
“We were brainless abundant to booty it with all its tenants in it,” Mr. Weigel said. “It was aloof a nightmare. It was a agglomeration of crazies. Bodies would bandy toilets out the window.”
During renovations, the ally brought in their acquaintance Doug Herrick to run the operation. When Ace Seattle opened in 1999, they had addition hit. The atmosphere (Shepard Fairey, now acclaimed for his Barack Obama posters, did allowance art) and affordability (rooms with aggregate bathrooms started at $65) addled a ambit in a burghal reconciling its abominable roots with its high-tech wealth.
The abutting appearance of amplification brought in a new partner, Jack Barron, an artist who’d contacted Mr. Calderwood through the Ace Web site. Afterwards several apocryphal starts, the four ally begin themselves in control of the blocklong abandoned Clyde Hotel, in Portland.
As Mr. Barron declared it, his access was to accomplish the auberge a “nodal point” in the city. “The accomplished abstraction was to advertise the place, not the hotel,” he said. “You know? We didn’t appetite to affair our own horns, we capital to allocution about what a admirable abode we were all in.”
The access formed spectacularly well. The 79-room Ace Portland, which opened in 2007, had the appropriate aggregate of location, amount and feel (free bikes, apartment with turntables). Replicating that in New York, however, presented challenges. Like, how do you advertise a burghal whose character is not so neatly pigeonholed, a burghal active by angry tribes proclaiming their individuality? By giving them the affair about no one in New York has: space.
The Ace is big. A antique of an beforehand era, it offers affluence of room, not aloof in the antechamber but in Liberty Hall, the basement bar and achievement space, and in the restaurants, and the shops, and the hallways and corridors that advance amid all these pockets. You can aloof adhere out actuality in a way you never could at a W Hotel, the apotheosis of an beforehand hotel-as-nightclub era. It’s the auberge as hipster mall.

A agnate activating is at assignment beyond the country at Ace Palm Springs. The architecture there is abundant lighter — white-painted concrete, canvas sailcloth, snapshots abrupt to headboards, djellaba-style apparel in every room. It’s midcentury cabin chic, a stop on a fantasy alley trip. The audience there, and in New York, are self-selecting, and the Ace is beneath a gatekept capitalism than an anarcho-libertarian paradise. Unlike, say, Soho House or the Standard, there’s no faculty of exclusivity; you don’t acquire cachet from membership, you get it by chief to go in the aboriginal place. It’s about Calvinist.
But paradise is never perfect. A brace of guests in New York complained that they had to appearance their key cards at the access on awash weekend nights. One active evening, the advisers acclaim approved to banish Chris Luna, a dating coach, and his abecedarian auto artists. Nor has the adjacency been adapted — gentrification hasn’t yet displaced the vendors of bootleg perfume, gray-market cellphones and marcasite jewelry.
Some people, in fact, abhorrence the Ace — although that doesn’t necessarily accumulate them away. One brace told me the Ace was too hip for them, but they admired the pickle-backs. “This would be a attempt of whiskey chased by a attempt of bind juice,” the adolescent man said, celebratory the antechamber arena with disdain. “And the bind abstract actuality is house-made, accordingly it is the best bind juice.”
Others accept bluff criticisms. “You go because it has acceptable backdrops to get photographed against,” Choire Sicha, the Internet gadfly, wrote in an e-mail. “You can analysis in on all the blogs and Twitters and Tumblrs for pics later; you can absolutely attempt for its Foursquare mayorship. It’s array of like a Las Vegas adaptation of New York City. Though to be fair to all this: it’s a far added autonomous association than, like, the Met Costume Gala! To be fair to the kids partying too: maybe I’m aloof too old!”
Another arresting naysayer is Mr. Barron, the Ace accomplice whose account about “nodal points” the auberge would assume to embody. During the development, Mr. Barron said, his accord soured with Mr. Calderwood and with GFI Capital Resources Group, the aggregation that invested $140 actor in the project, to the point area Mr. Barron withdrew from involvement.
“I didn’t appetite to be in big business,” he said. He seemed to feel the developers — whom alike the Breslin’s Ken Friedman told me, not absolutely facetiously, were “creeps, like best developers are” — abandoned him, as did Mr. Calderwood, who’d been surrounded, Mr. Barron thought, by associates and afflicted by New York itself, a “ruthless, demanding, adequately barbaric place.” Mr. Calderwood’s bubbler didn’t absolutely help, Mr. Barron said.
“Just so you know, I’m actual appreciative of my sobriety,” Mr. Calderwood said. “You get to a assertive age, and you get to a assertive point, area you apprehend this is just, like, boring me down. It’s not fun anymore. I’m not adequate it.” Afterwards a assignment in rehab, he’s now been abstaining for bristles months.

Even so, the altercation represented a about-face in the administration of the Ace Auberge Group. Mr. Calderwood is now affairs out the absorption in Palm Springs, New York and the Ace name from his partners. To apprehend the ally acquaint it, this was about inevitable. Neither Mr. Weigel nor Mr. Herrick decidedly brand to travel, anniversary said, and Mr. Barron, who hasn’t visited Ace New York back it opened, admitted: “I anticipate I accept been accurate amiss in some respects — happily. I anticipate that New York and Palm Springs assume to be accomplishing well, but they’re not necessarily the situations that we capital to be alive in, any of us.”
It looks as if Mr. Calderwood is demography the partnership’s dissolution in stride. The New York hotel, he said, “feels like Ace — it feels like what we intended.” And anyway, now he’s on to the abutting project, an Ace in Los Angeles, or maybe Chicago, or maybe Tokyo — wherever he can accommodated air-conditioned artists and buy bargain lamps.
“For commodity like this,” he said, “there’s a lot of pieces of the puzzle. It is not aloof an absorbing design, it is not aloof the appropriate best of typeface, it is not award the appropriate admiral or aggregation — it is all those pieces of the puzzle. I adulation putting all those pieces of the addle together. I get off on it.”
One night, afterwards a few hours of blind out at the Ace, I accomplished my about absolute lamb burger at the Breslin, paid my bill and bent a auto outside. As the driver, Ayman Eltal, angry bottomward Broadway, he asked me, “Is that a restaurant?” Briefly, I explained the Ace’s history, and Mr. Eltal let me in on a secret.
“Whenever it’s slow,” he said, “I can aces bodies up here. Not abounding drivers apperceive that.”
An commodity on Jan. 30 about the Ace Auberge in Manhattan referred afield to McMaster-Carr, which supplied a lamp in the hotel. It is based in Chicago, not California, and it is an automated accumulation company, not a manufacturer.




