The Beverly Hills Supper Club was a major attraction, less than 2.5 miles (4 km) outside
Cincinnati, just across the
Ohio River in
Southgate, Kentucky, on
US 27, near what later became its interchange with
Interstate 471. The club booked its entertainers from
Las Vegas,
Nashville,
Hollywood,
New York, and other show-business hubs. The site had been a popular nightspot and illegal
gambling house as early as 1926. Ohio native
Dean Martin had been a blackjack dealer there. In 1967, organized crime figures
Moe Dalitz, Morris Kleinman and Samuel A. Tucker sold The Beverly Hills Country Club to
Joseph E. Cole, Sam W. Klein, Carl Glickman and two other men (one of whom has been linked to New Jersey mob boss
Gerardo Catena), who, in 1974, sold to the Richard Schilling family. In 1971, the club reopened under the then-current owners and management and was considered an elegant venue that attracted top-notch talent and affluent clientele. Several additions had been built onto the original structure between 1970 and 1976, creating a sprawling, non-linear complex of function rooms and service areas. The resulting complex was roughly square, and though it was not situated in a north–south direction, reports of the fire have tended to use these as reference points when describing the complex. Assuming this system, the front entrance of the complex lay at the southern point of the compass. Along the central portion of the southern wall, to the east of the building entrance, was a small event room called the Zebra Room. A narrow corridor to the Zebra Room's east separated it from the Viennese Room and a series of service spaces, which ran northward along the building's eastern wall. This interior corridor terminated between the Garden Room, occupying the central portion of the north wall of the building, and the Cabaret Room, which jutted out from the northeastern corner of the building. A smaller, branching corridor led from the internal corridor to an exit door that sat between the Garden Room and the Cabaret Room; to exit the building from the Cabaret Room using that corridor, a person had to pass through a set of double doors into the main interior corridor, pass through a single door between the main interior corridor and the branching interior corridor, turn a sharp corner into the branching corridor, and proceed approximately one-quarter of the length of the Cabaret Room to the single door connecting the branching corridor to the exterior. This complex navigation was not atypical for the building; a number of other event and services spaces were scattered through the rest of the building, with some rooms leading into each other, some leading into interior hallways, and some leading to the outside of the building. A partial second story covered approximately the southern third of the building, sitting above the main entrance, Zebra Room, and main dining room; it held two more small event rooms made of six smaller rooms conjoined, collectively labeled the Crystal Rooms. Though the building's frame and ceiling tiling was classified as non-combustible, the Beverly Hills Supper Club made substantial use of wooden building materials, including floor joists for the two-story portion of the complex and framing on interior hallways. It was decorated throughout with highly flammable carpeting and wood wall paneling; event rooms also used wooden tables and supports, as well as tablecloths, curtains, and a variety of other small combustible materials. The building did not have a fire-suppression sprinkler system installed—at the time, these were not required in venues such as the Supper Club—nor did it have an alarm system or smoke detectors. In addition, the majority of the paths of egress in each event room led not to the outside of the building but to a variety of narrow interior corridors and service spaces. ==Fire==