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Occupying an 18th-century house but kitted out with iPod docks and Blu-ray players, the Mill House Inn's ten individually decorated rooms strike an easy balance...more
see the The Hamptons guide
Ninety miles north of New York City, this wood and Shawangunk-stone castle resort and National Historic Landmark in the Hudson Valley is "a huge building, but...more
Not to discount the power of true love, but if Jean Cocteau's 1946 La belle et la bête is indeed Benjamin Noriega-Ortiz's design inspiration for the lush...more
see the New York City guide
This single solitary full-service hotel in Brooklyn has some things going for it. It's situated just south of the Brooklyn Bridge, so you can walk the 30...more
see the Brooklyn guide
In a neighborhood known for its boutiques (yet traditionally lacking any of the sleeping kind), shoppers finally have a place to rest their stylish heads. The...more
see the New York City guideThe biggest plus and minus for Brooklyn's first true boutique hotel, opened in 2008, is its location: at the top of restaurant row on Smith Street, across from...more
see the Brooklyn guideThis Upper West Side hotel has features usually associated with more expensive accommodations: good design, plasma-screen TVs, 24-hour room service, CD players...more
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A Beaux Arts masterpiece built in 1905featuring an overlay of Asian style courtesy of its Hong Kongbased parentthe Pen doesn't generally draw...more
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The Plaza emerges from its $400 million renovation with architectural grandeur, decor long on marble and crystal, plenty of references to Eloise, and of course...more
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The Hamptons have never been a hotel hotbed, but a few choice properties are emerging amid the 12-foot privet hedges and manicured lawns. The Reform Club, built...more
see the The Hamptons guide









