Soon after the Thundercat Lounge shuttered earlier this year, Grace Perry, of Gracie’s Tax Bar notoriety, swooped in to claim the two-story space, which got a major overhaul. The ambiance went from neon-soaked retro-futuristic to something darker, shinier, slinkier. On a typical night at Club Contact, you’re likely to find a mix of DJs, backdropped by projection art, spinning for cool kids dancing beneath rows of half-sphere mirrors that lower the ceiling, shrinking the room to feel at once cozier and more glam. The outside patio teems with folks lounging and flirting and enjoying tacos from the pop-up taqueria. But point of fact, there’s no such thing as a typical night at Contact. Look for evenings dedicated to line dancing lessons, ballroom dance lessons, world music, trance, eurodance, Latin house, bachata, singles nights, queer singles nights, lube wrestling (seriously), Halloween in August, neighborhood association meetings. Invariably these events attract a delightful-ass crowd: diverse, upbeat and hip without being aloof. Contact is the rare club — honestly, the rare venue of any sort — where people have as much fun as they’d hoped. Parking is free and abundant; the cover is, at most, $5; and you can get a beer for as little as $3. You are welcome.