Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Marissa Wu. Price: from $90/person Address: 35 East 76th St. (Upper East Side) “The Gallery at The Carlyle an incredibly intimate space—I think there were 10 to 15 tables total in the dining room.
Whether you're looking for a simple midday cup or an afternoon tea extravaganza, here are our favorite tea spots in NYC. Get Fancy (or Cozy!) With the Best Places for Afternoon Tea in NYC
The St. Pancras Renaissance London Hotel forms the frontispiece of St Pancras railway station in St Pancras, London.The station is one of the main rail termini in London and the final stop for international trains departing to Paris, Brussels, Amsterdam and other destinations in mainland Europe.
The Millennium Times Square New York is at 133–145 West 44th Street, between Seventh Avenue and Sixth Avenue near Times Square, in the Midtown Manhattan neighborhood of New York City. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The hotel is split across two land lots , each with a separate wing of the hotel.
The JW Marriott Essex House (commonly known as the Essex House) is a luxury hotel at 160 Central Park South in Midtown Manhattan, New York City, at the southern border of Central Park. Opened in 1931, the hotel is 44 stories tall and contains 426 Art Deco–style rooms and 101 suites, as well as 147 condominium residences. [2]
Dinner and drinks with a view! Hotel Hendricks has it all – with the new and improved Isla & Co and Daintree Rooftop bar, it is an obvious NYC hot spot. Isla at Hotel Hendricks in Midtown has ...
P. J. Clarke's is a saloon and gastropub, established in 1884 and is one of the oldest continuously operating restaurants in NYC. It occupies a building located at 915 Third Avenue on the northeast corner of East 55th Street in Manhattan. It has a second location at 44 West 63rd Street on the southeast corner of Columbus Avenue.
Hotel Elysée is a hotel at 60 East 54th Street (between Madison and Park Avenues) in Midtown Manhattan, New York City. The hotel was established by Swiss-born Max Haering in 1926 as a European-style hotel for the carriage trade. [1] New York's leading hatcheck concessionaire, Mayer Quain, purchased the hotel out of bankruptcy in 1937.