How to reach APEX in Washington

Washington works differently from New York or Miami: deal week is Tuesday-Wednesday-Thursday, when K Street lobbyists, McKinsey and BCG consultants, bankers from New York fly in for meetings at the SEC, Treasury, Capitol Hill. The APEX manager is on @Apex_concierge Telegram or WhatsApp on the same number, on shift 24/7. Reply in 1 to 3 minutes. On an ordinary evening the booking flows quietly: reception at the Jefferson or Four Seasons Georgetown, a table at Plume or Minibar or Komi, a Kennedy Center black-tie gala agreed — all in one chat. For peak periods (Cherry Blossom Festival, White House Correspondents' Dinner, State of the Union, Inauguration) booking 2 to 3 weeks ahead at minimum, for Inauguration — six months. Don't call — communication runs through encrypted messengers only. Don't come to 3000 K Street NW: it's a coordination point, not reception.

Time zone and operating hours

Washington runs on America/New_York, EST/GMT-5 in winter and EDT/GMT-4 in summer (second Sunday of March to first Sunday of November). The APEX manager replies 24/7 against local time. Peak load — Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday from 18:00 to 23:00 (Washington closes the kitchen at 22:00, the bars by 23, and even on a Friday by midnight Georgetown is asleep). It's a unique mode — the only one of our cities with a midweek peak. Model match — 30 to 90 minutes depending on the scenario. Requests in Washington come in earlier: for a Tuesday — Monday morning or Sunday; for a Friday Kennedy Center gala — two weeks ahead. The headline peaks of the year: Cherry Blossom Festival (late March-mid April); White House Correspondents' Dinner (late April); State of the Union (late January-early February); Inauguration (every four years, January, hotels six months out). Summer quieter — Congress on August recess. For guests from Moscow (GMT+3) the gap is 8 hours in winter, 7 in summer.

Languages

The manager handles Russian and English at equal level. Among Washington-base models English is held by all at native American or fluent international with international diplomatic protocol. Russian — held by a notable share. French, Spanish — held by a portion (the diplomatic corps: French, Latin American, EU embassies). Arabic, Chinese, Korean, Japanese — selectively, for guests of APAC and Middle Eastern diplomatic missions. For diplomatic protocol we hold a separate pool of models with embassy etiquette literacy. If language matters (an embassy reception, a dinner with an international delegation, an embassy reception during State of the Union) — state the level: small talk, business, native.

Channels

What to write in the first message

The sharper the brief, the faster the match. An ideal opening message contains: meeting format (dinner at Plume at the Jefferson or Minibar or Komi or Fiola Mare on the Georgetown waterfront / a room at the Jefferson or Four Seasons Georgetown or Willard opposite the White House or Watergate in Foggy Bottom / a Kennedy Center black-tie gala / WHCD at the Washington Hilton / an embassy reception), date and time, location (zone — Georgetown, Foggy Bottom, Penn Quarter, Capitol Hill, K Street, DuPont Circle), duration, and model preferences (type, height, languages, experience for the format). For a business scenario — the format: a K Street meeting, a deal-week dinner with McKinsey/BCG, a banker from New York. For a cultural one — which Kennedy Center or National Symphony production. Without these details the match still happens, just with an extra 30 to 60 minutes built in.