The Top 22 Hotels Near The Abner Hotel
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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 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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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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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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A lodge in the Catskills shadow where New York restaurateurs have reconceived the Alpine inn for the Hudson Valley crowd, all retro timber and considered restraint. The restaurant reads as an extension of the hosts' conviction that rural escape needn't sacrifice sophistication.
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A modernist boutique hotel tucked into Yale's campus, all armchairs and bookshelves and the quiet authority of being exactly where it belongs. Its restaurant, Heirloom, serves seasonal New England cooking with the kind of restraint that suggests the chef knows something you don't.
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A sleek perch across from Yale's art school, Graduate New Haven trades boutique posturing for the straightforward comfort of a well-run college-town hotel. The formula—stylish rooms at moderate prices, steps from campus—works because it doesn't pretend to be anything grander than what visitors actually need.
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The Blake Hotel pitches itself as a modern alternative to transience, with rooms that balance industrial angles and classic comfort while kitchenettes suggest extended stays. Its rooftop bar, High George, frames New Haven's colonial skyline while the building's gallery space keeps local artists in view.
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Prospect's hand-built cabins and restored wetlands frame views of Prospect Lake and the Taconic Range with the deliberation of a landscape architect who also happens to be a poet. The suspended porch of the Cliff House catches light and wind chimes in equal measure, suggesting that refuge requires nothing more than attention.
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A former bed and breakfast in Great Barrington run by New York restaurant veterans, with five rooms that blend Colonial bones against modernist furniture and a restless collection of art. The sitting room, music room, and billiards parlor suggest a place more invested in atmosphere than mere sleep.
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A former Pirelli tire factory reborn as a solar-powered hotel, its Brutalist concrete frame and Bauhaus geometry intact beneath the management of a chain. Breuer's austere vision survives the corporate makeover, making it the most architecturally resolved accommodation in New Haven.
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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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Guests arrive at a gilded 19th-century mansion in the Berkshires, trading desert heat for New England quietude, where Canyon Ranch's wellness philosophy takes root in converted seminary halls. The clientele skews toward Boston and New York money, drawn to a place that promises transformation without the Arizona heat.
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A purpose-built wellness resort in the Berkshires that marries minimalist design with genuine recreation—spa services, beekeeping, a canopy course—without the ascetic pretense of its peers. The kitchen honors restraint and nutrition while permitting wine at lunch and cocktails before dinner, a philosophy that feels both modern and fundamentally sane.
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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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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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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 Seventies motor lodge on Lenox's north side has been reimagined as a meticulously detailed luxury retreat, its retro bones now housing thoroughly modern comforts. The transformation suggests less nostalgia than architectural conviction—a place where period reference serves clarity rather than kitsch.
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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 1920s cinema reborn as a motor inn and now a design-forward hotel, Rivertown Lodge layers Shaker restraint with contemporary color through the work of Hudson-area craftspeople. The owners and Brooklyn firm Workstead have created lodgings that feel at once historically rooted and unmistakably present-day.
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A converted textile factory from the 1890s, Pocketbook Hudson anchors itself in industrial red brick while its recent renovation positions it as something more ambitious than the region's typical inns. The architecture holds its own story—hard edges softened by luxury proportions—and that tension defines the place.
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A restored Queen Anne mansion on a quiet Hudson street houses this boutique hotel, where 19th-century bones meet understated modern furnishings and contemporary art. Matouk linens and Frette towels suggest luxury without fanfare—the kind of place that lets the house, and the town beyond it, do most of the talking.