New Hotels in New York That Revive the Romance of the Gilded Age

1 month ago 107

T Magazine|New York’s Newest Hotels Reveal the City’s Romantic Streak

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/08/07/t-magazine/new-york-hotels-gilded-age.html

You have a preview view of this article while we are checking your access. When we have confirmed access, the full article content will load.

Landscaped terraces, vintage cocktail bars and plush screening rooms — Manhattan’s hospitality scene revives the Gilded Age

A hotel room with a large window and patterned curtains, red patterned wallpaper and a bed with scalloped sheets.
One of the junior suites at TriBeCa’s new Warren Street Hotel.Credit...Simon Brown

Aug. 7, 2024, 5:18 p.m. ET

Hotels are often agents of change in a neighborhood. That’s certainly true in New York, where buttoned-up Wall Street and the frenetic NoMad district, north of Madison Square Park, are just two of the beneficiaries of the city’s latest hotel boom. More than 40 properties have opened across the five boroughs since 2022, during a post-Covid rebirth that’s brought fresh energy to long-overlooked pockets of Manhattan as well as to its most well-trodden quarters. Among these new arrivals are the Hotel Chelsea, a long-awaited revival of the venerable art-crowd hangout, and Nine Orchard, an elegant makeover of a 1912 bank building on the Lower East Side. Then there’s the Aman, the hushed retreat that opened two summers ago in the middle of Midtown. At least two more luxury hotels are planning to welcome guests next month: the Surrey, an Upper East Side landmark entirely remade by the Malta-based Corinthia Hotels group, and the Manner, an upscale sibling of the Standard hotels, in SoHo. Here, a closer look at five other attention-worthy newcomers:

Image

The Fifth Avenue HotelCredit...Courtesy of The Fifth Avenue Hotel

Not too long ago, Manhattan’s NoMad neighborhood was an unglamorous commercial hub, home to a slew of wholesale jewelry and luggage businesses. Now it’s brimming with lively cafes and bars and a cluster of stylish lodgings. Just down the block from both the Ritz-Carlton New York, NoMad, housed in a 50-story high-rise, and the Ned NoMad (see below), the Fifth Avenue Hotel opened last fall in two adjoining buildings: a 19th-century mansion turned bank, and a new glass tower that holds the majority of the property’s 153 guest rooms. The designer Martin Brudnizki gave the interiors his signature maximalist treatment, mixing textures and jewel-toned patterns to create an atmosphere that’s both bohemian and romantic, akin to a cross between Victorian London and Belle Epoque Paris. Cafe Carmellini, the restaurant overseen by the chef Andrew Carmellini, feels just as anachronistic, evoking a Gilded Age power lunch spot, where deals are made within a double-height dining room amid towering, sculptural faux trees. Rooms from about $895 a night.

Image

Élysée’s, a Mediterranean restaurant at Fouquet’s New York.Credit...Matthieu Salvaing

Known for its elegant hotels in Paris and jet-set vacation spots like St. Bart’s and Cannes, the French hospitality group Groupe Barrière opened its first U.S. property two years ago, the 97-room Fouquet’s New York, on a quiet cobblestoned street in TriBeCa. The red-brick facade echoes the neighborhood’s renovated warehouses, but step inside and you’re in a Parisian dreamscape conjured by Martin Brudnizki. The in-demand designer (his studio is also behind the revamped Surrey, in addition to the Fifth Avenue Hotel) filled the rooms with cut-glass chandeliers, curved sofas, fringed lampshades and a color scheme that favors soft hues of blush, peach and celadon green. The subterranean spa, which contains a small pool, is awash in marble. There’s also a screening room, with armchairs and chaises upholstered in gold velvet. The four dining options have decadent old-world flair, too. At Le Vaux Rooftop, for example, which is only open to hotel guests and members of Fouquet’s private club, the lobster rolls come with caviar. Rooms from about $1,000 a night.

Image

The lobby of the Ned NoMad.Credit...Courtesy of the The Ned NoMad

Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times.


Thank you for your patience while we verify access.

Already a subscriber? Log in.

Want all of The Times? Subscribe.