Club Bboss in East Tsim Sha Tsui is closing. I’ve never actually been there – I’ve always assumed it was something that I couldn’t afford – but I’d been to one or two of the other old style mega-nightclubs nearby, though my last visit was probably 9 or 10 years ago. There are still roughly 1 gazillion such clubs across the border in Shenzhen though I can’t say whether or not they approach the size or style that Bboss was reputed to have.
From the SCMP:
A Lady of the Night Shuts Up Shop
As dazzling spotlights shone down from the ornate golden ceiling, 50 glamorous hostesses ensured that the final night of a Hong Kong landmark, Club Bboss, went off in high style.
Loyal customers bid farewell to the nightclub last night, signalling the near-extinction of mega-Japanese clubs on the city’s entertainment scene.
The 28-year-old club was a landmark in Tsim Sha Tsui East, covering 70,000 sq ft in New Mandarin Plaza. It was known as one of the world’s top luxurious Japanese-decor nightclubs, with a dance floor big enough for 400 revellers.
Apart from the Rolls-Royces, Club Bboss was legendary for its hostesses. During its peak years, more than 1,000 locals – fluent in English and Japanese – were on hand to offer “hourly conversation service” to guests. For an additional fee, men could take the women out, but they ran the risk of driving cars cheaper than the escorts’ own Mercedes- Benzes; the women earned hefty amounts of money.
But entertainment culture changed, industries moved to the mainland and other cities became more competitive. One after another, the glamorous nightclubs drew their curtains for the last time.
Club Paris, also in Tsim Sha Tsui, will close at the end of this month, a person in the business says. That will leave Club de Hong Kong as the district’s only mid-sized nightclub.
Club Bboss will be replaced by a duty-free shop, paying a monthly rent of HK$1.5 million to club founder Law Cheuk, who owns the building.
China City Nightclub, Bboss’ biggest rival, closed in 2005. At Bboss, formerly known as Club Volvo, the number of staff dwindled to 100.
An escort known as Yuki, in her 30s, has worked at the club for about five years. She took the job to pay off a debt, which she has done. “It’s all a matter of luck. I met a man at the club who I’ve been with for half a year, and he paid me HK$500,000,” she said.
Escorts earned HK$20,000 to HK$30,000 a month, depending on tips. They were paid HK$700 per table, plus HK$1,600 per evening by guests who dated them – HK$300 of which went to the mama-san.
“I will miss it a lot,” said Yuki. “I worked here to find true love, so I stayed until the last day.”
Bboss was well past its glamour days, said a waiter who worked there for a decade. “It was very busy down here, with seven out of 10 VIP rooms filled. These days only three out of 10 of the rooms are used,” he said.
Fewer Hongkongers came, replaced by big-spending mainland customers, he said. “They are quite generous, handing out thousands of dollars at a time.”
Many big names have visited over the years.
Li Chuwen, then deputy director of Xinhua news agency, officiated at its opening. Soccer players, including Fernando Morientes and Raul Meireles, visited in 2003.
Lawmaker Chim Pui-chung, of the financial services functional constituency, used to visit the club years ago.
“Times have changed,” he said. “Consumers now have more choices, and there are a lot more entertainment premises in mainland cities. The gambling scene in Macau is also thriving.”
Anthony Lock, founder of the karaoke chain California Red and chief executive officer of the Tsui Wah restaurant, agreed that the club scene had changed.
“The 80s was their golden period, with more than 10 such clubs competing on the scene,” he said. “It was in line with the boom in the stock market.
“Things started to change in the 1990s, when people began to head north for shopping and entertainment. Only commercial clients remained faithful.”
Stanley Lau Chin-ho, deputy chairman of the Federation of Hong Kong Industries, said factory managers used to bring overseas clients to the nightclub.
Now the factories have moved to the mainland, and so has the entertainment.
You gotta love the way the SCMP dances around the topic of those hostesses. ”HK$1,600 per evening by guests who dated them.” Yes indeedy.
At least in this case the closing seems to be a matter of dwindling business rather than raising rents.
Also, what, a duty free shop? What duty? Don’t you just love all those tourist rip-off shops along Nathan Road with the huge lit-up signs proclaiming tax free? What tax? So a mega-store targeted at mainland Chinese, now there’s a shocker.

HK30,000 a month??? That’s like US50,000 a year. That’s not a whole lot of money. Thought they would have made at least a hundred grand a year… I was indeedy wrong..
They probably made a lot more than that, at least the good ones. If a girl got taken out of the club, she’d get that $1300 bar fine plus whatever she negotiates with the guy on top, probably at least a couple thousand, possibly drink commissions and could make HK$5k per night if she’s good. And some mainlanders would tip a whole lot more than that. That’s HK$30k in one week. And even if she doesn’t get taken out, she could make a couple thousand in tips per night if she’s good looking enough and good as a hostess. SCMP’s typical lazy reporting.
Aah, Club Volvo. I have a picture of myself in my boxer shorts taken outside the entrance with a Sikh doorman.
I used to go a fair bit in the late 80′s and early 90′s. 4 or 5 of us WITHOUT take-away would easily spend $15-20K. That’s when a secretary used to earn $4-6K.
The girls there earnt plenty. The guy at the end of the piece got it right… it was a favourite place for overseas buyers to be taken by factory owners.
The last time I went was perhaps 5 years ago. It was a sorry shadow of its former splendour. That place has seen some good times. Sad to see it go.
Between ’96 and ’00, 4 times per year a visit to Boss. It always was the ending of a daylong quarterly meeting with a major Japanese customer who had factories in Hongkong and Shenzen.
The ladies were great lookers and excellent conversationalists but overpriced (The company reserved a VIP room, usually 6 – 8 males and about 10 ladies. Barfines were put on the bill, individual “sleeping” arrangement’s had to be negotiated, except for the 2 top Japanese guys, the ladies billed our boss, the bill for the night was usually around $5k). I usually ended up with my “date” at a late night Korean BBQ and generally good conversation. Once I was lucky and the lady didn’t want to go home and I ended up with a freebie
I remember calculating for the price of one night ( ~3Am to 7AM) with a Boss lady I could have for a week every night a different lady at my home base in Bangkok.
At what location is Club de Hong Kong? Are there caucasian girls?
Thanks, Art
Art, Google is your friend.
I tried to find at Google, but no way…!