Crime & Safety

Prostitution Shutters UES Spa, NYPD Says

The spa is accused of acting as a brothel in a lawsuit brought on by the NYPD and the City of New York.

Zen Body Work has been shut down by the NYPD after city officials accused it of operating as a prostitution hub.
Zen Body Work has been shut down by the NYPD after city officials accused it of operating as a prostitution hub. (Miranda Levingston/Patch)

UPPER EAST SIDE, NY — The New York City Police Department shut down a spa on the Upper East Side on Friday after city officials accused it of selling sex in addition to regular massages.

The spa, Zen Body Works, on East 73rd Street between First and Second avenues, was shuttered on Friday, according to a large orange notice posted to the door.

The spa, which was visible from a street-level window, was fully vacant, and the number on the awning was disconnected when Patch called.

Find out what's happening in Upper East Sidefor free with the latest updates from Patch.

This is the second spa shut down on the Upper East Side on accusations of prostitution in the past two months. On April 22, the No. 8 Spa on East 86th Street between First and York avenues was also padlocked.

City officials filed the case against Zen Body Works in the Manhattan Supreme Court back in November, targeting the building at 330A East 73rd St., its owner 330 Real Estate Associates LLC, and the unnamed operators of the spa, and a judge ordered the space temporarily padlocked on Feb. 18 while the case proceeds in court, according to court records.

Find out what's happening in Upper East Sidefor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The signs posted to the door at Zen Body Works on the Upper East Side. (Miranda Levingston/Patch)

The space was permanently shuttered on May 15, according to the legal notice on the door.

In the lawsuit, city attorneys accuse the spa of selling sex on multiple occasions.

The lawsuit cites two undercover investigations in 2025 in which workers unknowingly offered sex and manual stimulation to an officer for an additional charge, as part of their massage treatment.

According to city lawyers, a worker offered an undercover cop a massage for $60 and a sexual act for an additional $100 on July 3, and on July 8, a worker offered sex to an undercover cop for $200 and an $80 "house fee."

Officials also said the address tied to the business appears on a website featuring explicit language, called hot.com.

One Upper East Sider told Patch that he'd been a loyal customer of Zen Body Works, describing the experience as a "free for all."

"You go in there, it was like $200, there were five girls in there," Mark Evan, a 63-year-old Upper East Sider, said.

He told Patch that he had been at the spa an hour before the cops arrived on May 15.

"They were beautiful girls, and it was a free-for-all," Evan said.

In the ongoing lawsuit against the Zen Body Works spa, the city is seeking to prohibit any future illegal activity at the site and allow authorities to seize materials connected to the alleged operation.

The city is also seeking civil penalties of $1,000 per day for each day the alleged conduct continued.

City lawyers argue the building’s owner and operators knew or should have known about the activity and failed to stop it.

The defendants have not publicly responded to the lawsuit.

Know of a business opening or closing in Manhattan? Email Miranda.Levingston@Patch.com.

Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.