60 E. 54th St., New York City, New York, United States | (212) 753-1066
Period details and lavish furnishings recall an old-fashioned European luxury hotel
Spacious, refined rooms
Themed presidential suites are charming and reflect events in the hotel's own history
Prime Midtown East location near high-end shopping
Large Club Room common area
Free Wi-Fi
Free Continental breakfast
Cocktail happy hour every day in the Club Room
Standard rooms may seem small to those unaccustomed to New York City hotels
No fitness center (free passes to New York Sports Club are provided)
No coffeemakers in rooms
Business center is a single computer in the library
Only one elevator, though the wait is usually no more than a few minutes
All Old World charm and elegance, the 103-room, upscale Hotel Elysee is superbly located for the high-end department-store shopping of Midtown East and the Upper East Side, and has enough tales to keep history buffs entranced for an entire stay. (They may feel as if they're spending the night with some of the city's most interesting friendly ghosts.) The free Wi-Fi, breakfast, and happy hour help enhance the boutique feel. Younger hipsters with an eye for scenes and not history, however, may wish to find somewhere sleeker to stay.
Scene
Oozing Old World elegance, the Hotel Elysee is a bastion of a New York that's otherwise faded into memory, charming its mostly older clientele with tales of former habitues Tennessee Williams and Vladimir Horowitz -- who you can almost hear pounding away at the the piano keys just around a lavishly decorated corner.
Founded in 1926 by a Swiss man who
wanted a specifically European-style hotel, the Elysee still reflects
his aesthetic, with Renaissance oil paintings and cameos,
rococo wallpaper, glittering crystal chandeliers, and
enough Old World touches to make you think you may have accidentally
entered a portal into the back halls of the Louvre. A later owner let
his children design each room according to their whims -- that
eclecticism is now seen mainly in the suites, such as the grand Vladimir
Horowitz Presidential Suite, named after the late pianist. (It still houses his piano.) The common area is spacious and comfortable, with lounge chairs that beckon guests to spend hours people-watching from the second-floor window overlooking the street below. (Though, on our visit, the Club Room was completely empty except for staff.) Clientele is mostly older, made up of half corporate and half leisure guests -- with many of the latter being regulars of the hotel.
Location
In Midtown East, with well-situated for great department-store shopping and Midtown sightseeing
Hotel Elysee has a prime spot for those visitors to New York who think the center of cultural gravity is still somewhere between Lincoln Center and Times Square. It's on a convenient location in Midtown
East, and some of the city's best shopping is only a matter of a few
minutes' walk away. It's a 10-minute walk to Central Park, and both Times Square and the Empire State Building are within a 25-minute walk. The hotel is right on Park Avenue, which means that guests won't be able to pop next door for most travelers' needs, but drugstores, restaurants, and delis are only a few minutes' walk away, and the Monkey Bar, though not technically the same business as the hotel, is right next door -- guests can slide right in through the connecting door in the lobby. Younger, hipper tourists, who may prefer a quick ride into Brooklyn, more vivacious nightlife, or more than a slight chance of a tattooed bartender, should save
this hotel for visits to New York with their parents and
grandparents, and find shelter farther downtown or in the outer boroughs.
Rooms
Rooms are all gorgeously decorated, though non-New Yorkers may find the standard rooms small. Suites are spacious, and themed suites are grandly appointed.
All rooms have refined, traditional decor, in line with the look of the rest of the hotel. Expect details such as chandeliers, crown moldings, and French armchairs. Standard (known as Deluxe) rooms, however, may seem small to those not used to New York's economy of space -- one room's entry door, for example, butts right up against the elevator doors. Junior suites and larger suites don't suffer the same issue, though bathrooms remain snug. The presidential suites (named after former guests Tennessee Williams, Vladimir Horowitz, and Vaclav Havel) are positively grand. The Horowitz Suite features the pianist's own piano, a dining table, a separate kitchenette with walk-in closet, a (non-working) fireplace and a balcony with a small garden table -- all appointed with an eye to European Renaissance styles.
Features
The hotel's age shows in its lack of amenities most modern places now take for granted, but the Elysee makes up for this by playing to its strengths.
The hotel takes pride in its long history, but its 1920s origins show through in its lack of certain amenities -- which the Elysee makes up for, often by playing to its strengths. Though the hotel doesn't have its own
gym, it offers New York Sports Club passes to guests that are good at
any branch in the city. There is no in-house hotel kitchen, so the hotel relies on its longstanding special relationship with the adjacent Monkey Bar, which supplies room service till 10 p.m. Though the closest thing the lobby has to a common area with seating is a small sitting room, the second-floor Club Room is large and is the site of the daily happy hour (with wine and appetizers) and free Continental breakfast.
Deluxe Double Room
Deluxe Room
Junior Suite
Parlor Suite
Piano Suite
Premier Suite
Royal Suite
Street Side Superior Room
Suite
60 E. 54th St., New York City, New York, United States
(212) 753-1066