The Top 57 Hotels Near Café Silvia
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A former industrial structure repurposed into lodging, the Roundhouse sits at the intersection of Beacon's art-world ascendancy and its gritty waterfront past. The hotel embodies the town's unlikely reinvention—a place to rest between gallery visits and riverside walks.
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A working farm in Gardiner transformed into a hushed resort of sixty-five cabins, where the Auberge Collection's expertise in rural luxury meets genuine seclusion. Clay, the on-site restaurant, channels the valley's produce and a catholic wine list into cooking that tastes of where you are.
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An eight-room Westchester inn where fireplaces and terraces overlook surrounding woods, pairing old-world elegance with contemporary restraint. The Bedford Post Tavern downstairs hums with the ease of a place that knows how to balance rusticity and cosmopolitan appetite.
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Hotel Nyack trades Hudson Valley rusticity for downtown cool: loft rooms, a rooftop bar, and urban swagger in a river town that mostly traffics in nostalgia. The steakhouse anchors the whole enterprise—a place that feels less like escape and more like an extension of the city you left behind.
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A modernist hotel tower in White Plains with interiors that could belong to Manhattan, housing Kanopi, a restaurant perched on the 42nd and 43rd floors with views of the Hudson Valley and distant skyline. The spa, complete with an indoor pool and lounge, suggests the place asks you to stay awhile rather than rush through.
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A entrepreneur's meticulously realized fantasy of English country living unfolds across eleven rooms and common spaces in the Hudson Valley, each layered with visual storytelling and understated luxury. The Six Bells achieves what most pastoral retreats attempt but rarely sustain: a sense that you've stepped into a coherent, lived-in world rather than a decorator's vision.
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A 40-room compound in the Hudson Valley where minimalist cabins and a farmhouse converge around communal dining, wellness facilities, and a nine-hole course. The kitchen draws on Mediterranean techniques to honor local produce, and the whole venture reads as architect Taavo Somer's vision of thoughtful retreat made tangible.
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A beautifully restored mid-century motel in the Catskills that wears its retro identity without irony, the Starlite sits at the intersection of nostalgia and genuine hospitality. Its dedication to period authenticity suggests a proprietor who understands that the appeal of such places lies not in kitsch but in the integrity of their original design.
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An 18th-century Dutch Colonial estate in Stone Ridge has become a Hudson Valley refuge where period architecture meets contemporary comfort, anchored by a private lake and modernized grounds. The farm-to-table restaurant Butterfield occupies the main house, while guest quarters inhabit the converted carriage house and stables.
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On fifty-eight rolling acres in the Litchfield Hills, this Georgian country house feels transplanted from England, all canopied beds and period art softened by modern ease. The staff's attentiveness and the gardens' unhurried pace conspire to make two hours from Manhattan feel like another century entirely.
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In the Hudson Valley, Mirbeau channels Monet through soft architectural lines and a soothing palette designed to evoke French repose. The 12,000-square-foot spa anchors the experience—salt saunas, steam rooms, heated outdoor pools—while each of the 49 rooms offers a private Juliet balcony and fireplace for retreat.
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A defunct brickyard on Kingston's riverfront has been remade into a gleaming hotel and event space where industrial bones meet contemporary comfort. The marriage of raw architectural heritage and modern luxury feels less like nostalgia than inevitability.
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A rambling Dutchess County estate that has hosted writers and thinkers for over a century, Troutbeck anchors itself in continuity rather than reinvention, its stone cottages and rebuilt manor housing a restaurant that moves with deliberate grace through seasons and courses.
- Michelin Guide 1 Key
- James Beard Awards 2022 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: New York State · Gabe McMackin
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The Hotel Kinsley spreads its 42 rooms across four restored historic buildings—a former bank, a pre-Revolutionary cottage—along Kingston's reviving waterfront, ninety-five miles north of Manhattan. Restaurant Kinsley, helmed by respected New York operators, serves New American cooking that justifies the journey as much as the rooms do.
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A self-contained tower of marble and restraint at Fifth and 57th, Aman New York channels the brand's resort philosophy into Manhattan's densest block. The effect is less escape than transposition—you move through the city but remain suspended in a different order of quiet.
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Firmdale's 86-room hotel trades corporate polish for textured warmth—padded fabrics, original art, a whimsical video clock in the lobby—proving that English restraint can outshine American luxury on Midtown's crowded block. Each room unfolds its own visual logic, a deliberate counterpoint to the interchangeable anonymity that defines the neighborhood.
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The Mark, perched on the Upper East Side, channels old-money restraint through a recently overhauled interior that manages to feel both classical and current. Its very existence argues that tradition need not calcify into stuffiness.
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Rank 18. The Carlyle
Hotels
The Carlyle stands as Upper East Side bedrock—a postwar tower where old money and old-world service remain unshaken, indifferent to trend. Its lobby bar still hums with the weight of decades, a room where discretion and a martini are the only innovations required.
- Forbes Travel Guide Forbes Four Star
- Michelin Guide 2 Keys
- Time Out 2026 · The 35 best hotels in New York City
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A gleaming black tower at Columbus Circle holds 176 rooms dressed in marble and gilded fixtures, each commanding views of Central Park from floor-to-ceiling glass. The place trades ostentation for a quieter kind of service—a personal attaché, the finest linens, the understood luxury of discretion.
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A 33-story art deco tower at Central Park South housing 253 rooms dressed in muted tones and dark wood, all hushed marble and club chairs that whisper old money without shouting. The Ritz-Carlton's formula—luxury amenities, impeccable service, location—works precisely because it works, a place where the city's noise stops at the lobby door.
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A 1905 Beaux Arts palace anchors Fifth Avenue with marble halls and crystal chandeliers, its grandeur refreshed by a meticulous recent restoration. The Peninsula's service ethic—attentive without fussiness—feels distinctly of New York, the sort of place where classical architecture and contemporary comfort coexist without apology.
- Forbes Travel Guide Forbes Five Star
- Michelin Guide 1 Key
- Time Out 2026 · The 35 best hotels in New York City
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A crystal-obsessed hotel across from MoMA where 2,000 LED-embedded Harcourt glasses form a 24-hour foyer installation, and the Grand Salon stages its own competition with pleated silk and silver leaf. The décor will outshine you, which is precisely the point.
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A century-old Art Deco landmark on the Upper East Side, recently revived with interiors that honor its mid-century glamour while speaking to contemporary taste. Casa Tua's dining room and lounge occupy the ground floor, turning the hotel into a gathering place where old New York aesthetics meet present-day sophistication.
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High above Columbus Circle in a glass tower, the Mandarin Oriental offers the cool geometry of Asian minimalism—pale wood, marble, silence—with panoramic views of the park and river. The formula is flawless, the service alert without fuss, the spa a refuge from the city's noise.
- Forbes Travel Guide Forbes Five Star
- Michelin Guide Selected Hotels
- Time Out 2026 · The 35 best hotels in New York City
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The Lowell Hotel on the Upper East Side offers a counterpoint to Manhattan's louder luxury hotels, its muted lobby a deliberate rebuke to architectural grandstanding. Here, restraint itself reads as an assertion of taste, and that quietude is the whole point.
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Rank 26. The Plaza
Hotels
At the southeast corner of Central Park, the Plaza's French Renaissance facade and gilded interiors have anchored New York's imagination since 1907, from Eloise to The Great Gatsby. Beneath the ornate Beaux-Arts details and 24-karat gold fixtures, Fairmont's stewardship maintains the hotel as a living relic of another era's idea of grandeur.
- Forbes Travel Guide Forbes Four Star
- Michelin Guide Selected Hotels
- Time Out 2026 · The 35 best hotels in New York City
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A vivid corner hotel in Washington Heights brings boutique sensibility to a neighborhood long starved of it, its colorful facade and equally chromatic interiors announcing arrival before you cross the threshold. The place reads as deliberate defiance of Manhattan's downtown hotel conventions.
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A 1904 landmark where original marble and brass persist beneath art deco flourishes, this Midtown institution assigns each guest a butler in tails to orchestrate the minor miracles of arrival and departure. The St. Regis trades in a particular New York idea of luxury—not novelty, but the accumulated confidence of a place that has never needed to prove itself.
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The Park Hyatt claims the lower floors of One57, a gleaming tower on Billionaires' Row with Carnegie Hall across the street, bringing a first major luxury hotel refresh to Manhattan in over a decade. Whether it justifies the wait and the weight of expectation is the question that will define it.
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A restored 1888 Victorian anchors Litchfield's new hospitality hub, its original fireplaces and grand staircase preserved under thoughtful renovation. Behind it, a modernist mews offers 31 rooms with garden views, creating an enclave that feels removed from the village green just beyond.
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I.M. Pei's limestone tower on East 57th Street commands Central Park views across palatial rooms that have hosted the city's power brokers since 1993. After a pandemic closure and thorough 2024 renovation, the hotel restores itself with refreshed dining under chef Maria Tampakis and the same meticulous service that built its reputation.
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Rank 32. The Pierre
Hotels
A 1930s limestone landmark anchoring Fifth Avenue at Central Park's edge, The Pierre marries old-world grandeur with contemporary refinement across its lobbies, suites, and bars. Hand-painted murals from its glamorous past persist alongside curated art, while Two E Bar serves classic cocktails beneath live musicians—a place where New York's social rituals unfold with quiet confidence.
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Amid Times Square's garish sprawl, this 42-story hotel by Ian Schrager offers an improbable sanctuary of white rooms, verdant terraces, and hushed corridors that repudiate the neighborhood's sensory assault. The spaces within—restaurants by John Fraser, a cavernous lobby bar, a nightclub partnered with an avant-garde collective—suggest downtown sophistication imposed on tourism's ground zero.
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The understated limestone façade on Park Avenue conceals a hotel that plays at feeling like a private residence, all muted tones and marble accents designed to make you forget you're a guest. Since 1963, it has perfected the Upper East Side formula of quiet luxury for those passing through, settling in, or simply living here on an extended lease.
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Reclaimed wood, green walls thick with vegetation, and industrial windows compose a deliberate counterpoint to Billionaires' Row just outside—a hotel asserting that luxury and environmental consciousness need not be strangers. The proximity to Central Park and Midtown feels less like proximity and more like permission to oscillate between both.
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A 1927 palazzo on Fifth Avenue with a Gothic spire and signature clock, The Sherry-Netherland has long drawn Central Park views and old-money leisure into its marble-vaulted lobby. Harry Cipriani's Venetian pedigree anchors the dining, where European formality meets the particular comfort of a room that feels lived-in rather than polished.
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A Gilded Age mansion on Madison Avenue transformed into a hotel preserves the grandeur of 1882 in marble, mahogany, and sweeping staircases. The rooms trade showiness for substance—deep comfort, generous proportions, and the particular quiet that old money still knows how to keep.
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Behind Madison Avenue's iron gates, The Towers occupies the Palace's upper floors as a private hotel-within-a-hotel, where a dedicated 50th Street lobby and concierge insulate guests from the crowds below. Each room frames the skyline—Rockefeller Center, the Empire State Building—with the kind of quiet remove that suggests you've stepped out of the city entirely.
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The marble lobby's crimson and gold antiques announce Old World refinement the austere facade conceals, drawing politicians and travelers to this Midtown perch. Steps from Central Park and Grand Central, The Kimberly trades grand-hotel theater for the discretion of a well-appointed private residence.
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A mid-century modern refresh animates this Upper Midtown landmark, its upper floors commanding Central Park views and its public spaces radiating Thompson's signature sleek restraint. The paradox persists: a deliberately unpretentious burger counter still operates on the otherwise polished lobby level.
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A converted courthouse in Litchfield's historic center, this twenty-room hotel pairs austere New England architecture with understated contemporary design across its public spaces. The former courtroom now serves as the restaurant, all soaring ceilings and marble, while a seasonal rooftop bar surveys the town below.
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A small-town compound where sixties idealism meets contemporary design, Woodstock Way marries modern lines with rustic textures and art that feels lived-in rather than curated. The rooms arrive complete with vinyl turntables and heated floors; the café handles coffee, leaving the town's restaurants to handle the rest.
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A 19th-century Tinker Street landmark reborn with bold colors and graphic art that makes each room feel like its own small world. Book the en-suite rooms early if you want privacy; the shared-bath chambers have their own stubborn charm.
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A four-suite Woodstock inn where each room honors a different woman musician, outfitted with fair-trade goods and Brooklinen linens that signal genuine care rather than marketing. Clawfoot tubs, wood-paneled bathrooms, and shared access to bikes and a hot tub create the feeling of a thoughtful retreat, not a theme-park version of one.
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A converted mansion in Montclair that channels Greenwich Village glamour through the taste of Bobbi Brown, who pivoted from cosmetics to interior vision with the same architectural certainty she once applied to beauty. The result feels less like a hotel and more like staying in the meticulously considered home of someone who knows exactly what matters.
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AutoCamp Catskills stages luxury camping in polished Airstreams and cabins just outside Saugerties, pitched to travelers seeking styled rusticity rather than genuine roughing it. The compound's X Suites and seasonal canvas tents complete a hospitality concept that treats the outdoors as backdrop for comfortable design.
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A 1950s motel reborn as a creekside boutique inn, where mid-century bones meet the careful curation of locally roasted coffee and Apotheke soap. The Leeway succeeds not by pretending to be something it isn't, but by understanding precisely what Brooklyn wants from the Catskills.
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Across from Central Park, Fasano's Manhattan outpost erases the line between residential discretion and hotel service, with duplex suites dressed in Loro Piana cashmere and vintage furnishings that whisper rather than announce. There are no lobbies, no public theaters—only a private caffè and the kind of personalized attention that rewards those who've learned to travel without being seen.
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In the theater district, CIVILIAN unfolds as a high-design boutique hotel that genuinely honors Broadway's glamour without kitsch. Pomeranc and Rockwell's theatrical attention to detail reads as restraint rather than excess, a distinction that matters.
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In the Catskills, this wellness resort trades New Age severity for a more approachable camp atmosphere, its Quaker-minimal interiors and 230 acres of woodland offering quiet refuge without dogma. The programming here respects the land as much as the guests—a distinction that, across seasons, feels less like hospitality and more like stewardship.
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The W Times Square shields you from the surrounding bedlam with a glass passage animated by cascading water, then deposits you in a serene seventh-floor lobby whose whiteness and restraint feel almost monastic. It's a small architectural reprieve in a neighborhood long since surrendered to spectacle.
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A Park Avenue monument restored to its Art Deco grandeur: silver corridors and recovered murals frame residential suites that whisper where public spaces declare. Michael Anthony's brasserie and a sprawling spa suggest the Waldorf's return is less nostalgia than reassertion.
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A hotel and pub steps from Times Square that trades the chaos for a quietly convivial Irish interior—all dark wood, low ceilings, and the particular warmth of a Dublin local you've somehow never left. The elevator ride up deposits you in a different New York entirely, one that prizes comfort and a steady pour over the relentless hum outside.
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Rank 54. The Wallace
Hotels
The Wallace's lobby announces itself with geometric tiles and a kinetic clock sculpture, a small gesture toward architectural theater in a residential neighborhood. The 124 rooms feel appointed rather than ostentatious, which suits the Upper West Side's temperament perfectly.
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A recent Kimpton arrival on 8th Avenue carves out stillness amid Times Square's chaos, its 364 rooms positioned within walking distance of the Theater District and Central Park South. Nine minutes from Radio City and Rockefeller Center, it functions less as a landmark than as a composed staging ground for midtown's relentless attractions.
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Rank 56. Boro Hotel
Hotels
The Boro Hotel's sprawling lobby doubles as a de facto workspace for the neighborhood, its airy common rooms offering respite from Manhattan's density. Rooms facing west capture the Queensboro Bridge in profile—a view that justifies the trek across the East River.
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Rank 57. The Knickerbocker
Hotels
A soundproofed sanctuary at Times Square's chaotic edge, The Knickerbocker trades spectacle for understated calm and minimalist restraint. The hotel's legendary history and notably comfortable beds suggest that refuge, not pageantry, remains its enduring claim.