Leaving to go to a clubhouse replicates a familiar daily rhythm.
Her brother enlists the members of the volunteer fire department, up to now better known for misusing public funds for their clubhouse.
From the late eighteenth century, however, inns and taverns were increasingly being turned into new kinds of buildings such as hotels, corn exchanges and clubhouses.
The clubhouse also offered games, music and dance, and-a commentary on the embattled mentality of a colony determined to defend itself-physical training on virtually military lines.
It limits the number of gaming machines which may be installed in any one building—for example, in a golf clubhouse—to two.
I hope that it would be prefectly possible to move that clubhouse were it to be affected by the route.
In most such applications, in addition to the clubhouse and the hotel there is usually a substantial housing element.
Woodford rugby football club, for instance, had a major debt to finance a new clubhouse in 1994, and was in financial trouble by 2002.