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The Ansonia Hotel on Broadway at the intersection with Amsterdam Avenue (image from 1905) This is an incomplete list of former hotels in Manhattan , New York City . Former hotels in Manhattan
The hotel was particularly known for its restaurant, the Café Lafayette, and drew its clientele from New York's French expatriates and the bohemians of Greenwich Village. John Reed described the hotel as "the real link between the old Village and the new, since it was the cradle of artistic life in New York." After Orteig's retirement in 1929 ...
The City Hotel (1794–1849) stood at 123 Broadway, [1] occupying the whole block bounded by Cedar, Temple, and Thames Streets, in today's Financial District of Manhattan, New York City. It was the first functioning hotel in the United States. [2]: 25,caption Until the early 1840s it was the city's principal site for prestigious social ...
Hotel Total Rooms New York Marriott Marquis: 1,966 New York Hilton Midtown: 1,929 Sheraton New York Times Square Hotel: 1,780 Hyatt Grand Central New York: 1,298 Row NYC: 1,331 New Yorker Hotel: 1,083 Park Central Hotel: 935 The New York Palace Hotel: 909 Edison Hotel: 900 The Westin New York at Times Square: 873 Crowne Plaza Times Square: 795
The St. Nicholas Hotel, depicted in an 1855 lithograph by Friedrich Ludwig Heppenheimer. The St. Nicholas Hotel was a 600-room, mid-nineteenth century luxury hotel on Broadway in the neighborhood of SoHo in Manhattan, New York City. [1] It opened on January 6, 1853, and by the end of the year had expanded to 1,000 rooms. [2]
The St. Regis New York is a luxury hotel at 2 East 55th Street, at the southeast corner with Fifth Avenue, in the Midtown Manhattan neighborhood of New York City. The hotel was originally developed by John Jacob Astor IV and was completed in 1904 to designs by Trowbridge & Livingston. An annex to the east was designed by Sloan & Robertson and ...
The Warwick New York is a luxury hotel at 65 West 54th Street, on the northeastern corner with Sixth Avenue, in Midtown Manhattan, New York City. Constructed between 1925 and 1927, it is owned by Warwick Hotels and Resorts .
The sleazier establishments on the side streets soon gave the district a new name, the "Tenderloin". When the theatre district moved uptown again, the area became part of the Garment District, and the Grand Hotel became a cut-rate residential hotel. [2] [3] [4] Oscar Wilde is known to have stayed at the hotel at least twice during 1882. [5]