Delilah Dallas has officially opened, marking the fourth outpost of the h.wood Group’s signature supper club concept—and its first in Texas.
Spanning 15,000 square feet, Delilah Dallas is the largest iteration of the concept to date. The interior design was led by John Sofio of Built Inc. in collaboration with the h.wood Group, balancing the brand’s intimacy with the scale required for a high-energy, multiroom destination.
Bigger and bolder: Delilah’s Texas outpost

The layout includes three private dining rooms—two of which can be combined into a single grand suite with a dedicated bar—alongside a wine room with an onsite sommelier, allowing the venue to flex between private gatherings and large-scale events.
While rooted in Delilah’s familiar supper club language, the Dallas location introduces several firsts for the brand. Classic elements—burlwood finishes, blush-toned velvet banquettes, low lighting, and crystal chandeliers—are paired with bolder material statements, including Blue Explosion marble at the bars, making its debut across the Delilah portfolio. The venue features the h.wood Group’s first-ever outdoor front porch, too.
Delilah Dallas is also home to an expansive main stage framed by dramatic Austrian curtains, plus three additional performance platforms surrounded by gold palm trees.
Art at Delilah Dallas

Art and cultural references play a central role in the interiors. Caricature portraits of notable Delilah regulars and Dallas and Texas figures—including Erykah Badu, Post Malone, Selena Gomez, Kelly Clarkson, Clayton Kershaw, and Dirk Nowitzki—line the private dining rooms.
Dallas native Temple Shipley served as art advisor for the project, bringing a research-driven approach informed by her experience with the Dallas Museum of Art, the Art Institute of Chicago, and Galerie Frank Elbaz in Paris. Her curatorial vision draws from Machine Age aesthetics and Art Deco’s fascination with speed, industry, and progress, expressed through streamlined forms, bold geometries, and layered visual references. Vintage imagery of historic Dallas supper clubs is woven throughout the interiors, grounding the space in both nostalgia and place.



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