The Top 13 Things to Do Near Blue Hill at Stone Barns
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A wellness retreat in the Hudson Valley hills for New Yorkers who need someone to make them put the phone down and hike for six hours. Think hard daily hikes, clean eating, massages, and a full menu of woo that includes colon hydrotherapy, so you know they mean business. Stays run three or four days, and they send you a 30-day prep program beforehand, which tells you exactly who books this place and how seriously they take it.
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Thirty-five floors above Columbus Circle, this full-service spa at the Mandarin Oriental has views of Central Park that most rooftop bars would kill for, and you get to enjoy them horizontal. The staff actually know what they're doing, which sounds like a low bar until you've been to enough hotel spas that don't. Asian-influenced treatments, a vitality pool, and a crystal steam room round things out. Bring someone who needs to decompress.
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Tucked above the Dior boutique on 57th Street, this tiny spa is the most logical excuse anyone has ever found to extend a shopping trip. Just a handful of treatment rooms, all draped in the house's signature plush aesthetic, and a clientele that absolutely has a lunch reservation after this. You won't lose yourself here, but you'll walk out looking like you've got it together, which in Midtown is honestly enough.
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If a spa could make Fifth Avenue feel like a different planet, this would be it. Tucked inside the Crown Building, Aman's New York outpost is a full-on luxury escape where the city noise just stops the second you walk in. The crowd is unhurried, well-dressed, and visibly unbothered in a way that takes money. It's not cheap, but the whole thing is calibrated to make you forget Manhattan exists.
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The Waldorf Astoria's Guerlain spa is the kind of place where the journey to the treatment room is half the point. The lobby alone, all Art Deco mosaic floors and lapis carpets, could hold you for an hour. The fifth floor itself is a proper sanctuary, quiet and tucked away from all that grandeur. They'll even touch up your makeup after your service, because of course they will, this is the Waldorf.
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Rescue Spa is a Flatiron day spa that somehow manages to feel like a downtown insider secret even though every beauty editor in the city has been here. The facials have a cult following that borders on suspicious, the kind of universal raving that makes you wonder what exactly is in those washcloths. The vibe is welcoming rather than intimidating, which counts for a lot when a bouncer is inexplicably stationed at the door.
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A luxury spa tucked beneath the Greenwich Hotel in Tribeca, Shibui is modeled on a Japanese onsen and it absolutely commits to the bit. The bamboo ceiling was imported and hand-assembled by Japanese craftsmen, the heated pool is enormous, the treatment rooms are genuinely silent, and yes, the towels are soaked in sake. It's the kind of place where people walk in wound tight and shuffle out looking mildly sedated, which is the whole point.
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A proper spa retreat tucked into 58 acres of Connecticut countryside, about two hours from the city when you need to remember what trees look like. The Mayflower Inn has been around forever, and the spa leans into both Eastern and Western treatments, so you can book a facial, then follow it with reiki or acupuncture without anyone blinking. The crowd is mostly weekending New Yorkers who've earned it, and honestly, they're right.