The club purchased property at 977 Delaware Avenue and approved Lyman's plans for the present day Tudor style building, by February 1921.
[1] In 2002, the club underwent a $1 million (equivalent to $1,694,000 in 2023) renovation that added two squash courts as well as general upgrades to its athletic facilities.
The other renovation work includes improvements to both the men's and women's locker rooms and the addition of exercise equipment.
Hamilton Houston Lownie Architects, PC designed the additions and Integrated Realty & Development Corp. served as construction manager.
The Delaware Room has a more clean look showcasing the oversized historic wall panels that depict seaside life.
On advice from its lawyers, members could keep items, unquestioned, in private lockers and order all the ingredients for a drink, without spirits, to be passed into the club's rooms through a small sliding door.
[10] Agents found at least sixty quarts of whisky, a similar amount of gin, five gallons of moonshine, bottles of champagne, vermouth, and other liquors inside the organization's lockers, according to court documents.
The chair of the club's house committee told reporters the night of the raid that the liquor “evidently was smuggled in by bootlegging employees of the club.”[9] A listing of those charged with dry law violations was published in the newspaper[10] After the names were published, the members and the club had little option but to agree to a settlement and do away with the sliding doors.