Hotel Tour: Step Inside This Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York
Ahead of its October 2023 grand opening, the Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York, designed by Martin Brudnizki, is presented in all of its charm.
Here, it is all about location. With pride of place on the corner of 28th Street and Fifth Avenue, the hotel is within walking distance to Madison Square Park, the Empire State and Chrysler Buildings. and a clutch of tent-pole museums and galleries such as the Gagosian, Lisson Gallery and Fotografiska.
More unusually, given the cost of Manhattan’s real estate, the hotel occupies two buildings – a handsomely restored 19th-century brick and limestone manse, and a new 24-storey glass tower.
A spacious, marvellous interior
Given the small number of guest rooms (153 to be exact), the hotel beautifully translates into an unusually spacious interior. It boasts the most striking spaces set within the original mansion, and every corner has been reworked and reimagined over a seven-year renovation project.
Martin Brudnizki took on the feat of creating a hotel to stand out in New York. He takes his cues from not just the building’s Gilded Age credentials, but also the peripatetic travels of owner Alex Ohebshalom, a scion of the real estate Ohebshalom family, through Myanmar, Laos and Marrakech.
This explains the eclectic romanticism of the hotel’s mood board, which cheerfully mixes ornate furnishings – such as rainbow-hued crystal chandeliers, tiger-striped rugs, black and white side tables decorated with shell and bone inlays and tasselled curtains – with antique mirror-panelled walls and ceilings, pink corridors, elevator lobbies wrapped in rose-hued silk, and yellow wallpaper festooned with images of an exotic bestiary.
What room will you try?
The best rooms in the house are on the sixth floor. This can be accessed in the original mansion with its low-slung vantage point accented by views clear across Fifth Avenue. Guests travelling with a posse, however, will do well to check into the Topiary Suite. This suite features an outdoor terrace garden and room enough for six to dinner. That is, assuming the Wine Vault restaurant downstairs with its 42ft-high ceiling doesn’t suit.
Cannily, the hotel has its cross-hairs firmly fixed on the grand party set with a sprawling nearly 3,000 sq ft ballroom that Brudnizki has furnished to the hilt with 12ft-high coffered ceilings, and exuberant splashes of blue and gold.
Meanwhile, Andrew Carmellini – the chef and culinary impresario behind Robert de Niro’s Locanda Verde and downtown French stalwart Lafayette – is all set to open his eponymous Café Carmellini, though precise details of the French and Italian menu remain under wraps till the hotel’s mid-October 2023 opening.
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