No Vacancy begins before you even find the bar. The address leads you to a restored Victorian hotel on a quiet Hollywood side street — all peeling paint, creaking floorboards, and the faint scent of old timber. Then a hostess in period costume lifts the lid of a clawfoot bathtub and gestures downward. This is the entrance.
What unfolds below is one of LA's most deliberately theatrical drinking experiences. Multiple rooms branch off a central courtyard where fire performers work the crowd on weekend nights. The rooms vary wildly in atmosphere — a tiki-adjacent lounge here, a red-velvet parlour there — but the cocktail programme holds everything together. The bar team leans into the hotel narrative: drinks are named after characters and events from the property's fictional history, presented on parchment-style menus with a knowingly gothic sensibility.
Order the Hudson Ghost, a mezcal and amaro number with hibiscus and a smoke rinse that arrives under a glass cloche, or the Victorian Remedy, a gin-based concoction involving lavender, egg white, and a house-made citrus shrub. Prices are fair for Hollywood — cocktails run $16–$19 — and the pour quality justifies every dollar. This is a bar that commits fully to its conceit, pulls it off, and still manages to make excellent drinks in the process.
What to order
- 01
Hudson Ghost
Mezcal, amaro Montenegro, hibiscus, lime, smoke rinse — served under a cloche
$18 - 02
Victorian Remedy
Gin, lavender, egg white, citrus shrub, Peychaud's — frothy and floral
$17 - 03
The Lodger
Bourbon, honey, ginger, lemon, Angostura float — warming and precise
$16 - 04
Dark Passage
Rum, falernum, pineapple, coconut cream, activated charcoal — a tiki moment
$17
