Travel Article

New and Now in New York City

Stephen Starr's new hotspots, the spa nearest heaven and flat-screen TVs in the bathrooms — all waiting for your next overnight in New York

By Maureen Tkacik

Photo courtesy of the Mandarin Oriental
Stephen Starr, NYC: Why trek to his just-opened Chelsea Market outposts when you could get gorgonzola tempura right the hell here? Because it’s the spectacle that counts: Morimoto NY is iconic Japanese architect Tadao Ando’s first restaurant, and Buddakan is by far Mercer Kitchen designer Christian Liagre’s most impressive. (It’s breathtaking.) And because the NY Morimoto sports a big sake list, with the best nigori (unfiltered) sakes we’ve had. 88 10th Avenue, 212-989-8883 (Morimoto); 75 9th Avenue, 212-989-6699 (Buddakan).

See-and-be-seen brunch: Believe the hype and reserve early for Jean-Georges Vongerichten’s elegant yet neighborhoody new 60-seat West Village outlet Perry St., which JG apparently opened after a nasty GQ profile assailing his absenteeism and ambitious empire-building left him bedridden and soul-searching for days. 176 Perry Street, 212-352-1900; jean-georges.com.

Ridiculously relaxing spa experience: The 35th-floor Mandarin Oriental spa, quite possibly the most faithful approximation of heaven on earth, has started a new series of ritual ­massage/exfoliation treatments that are, like, to die for. The unlimited hangout time your $430 buys you in the amethyst crystal steam room, the “vitality” pool and the tea lounge is the next best thing to getting a room at the top of the new Time Warner Center. 80 Columbus Circle at 60th Street, 212-805-8880; mandarinoriental.com.

Pre-show supper: Squeeze into our favorite new Columbus Circle gem, the aptly named eclectic BYOB The Nook (746 9th Avenue, 212-247-5500; nynook.com). Or for something fancier, head a few blocks east to the newly renovated Peacock Alley at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, where chef Cedric Tovar offers a reasonable pre-theater dinner, while the Art Deco and live pianist evoke old New York glamour. 301 Park Avenue; 212-872-4895.

High-design hotels: We contemplated staying at the latest “budget” boutique project from hotel emperor André Balazs, the Hotel QT (125 West 45th Street, 212-354-2323; hotelqt.com), for its minimalist chic. But it was booked, so we opted instead for the year-old, David Rockwell-designed Alex Hotel, down the street. Its highly underrated restaurant, Riingo, from Aquavit chef Marcus Samuelsson and his adorable protégé Johan Svensson, won us over (212-867-4200; riingo.com); everything from sashimi to roast hen to the grilled strip with French toast and bacon was sublime. Back at the hotel, rooms are so preposterously luxe (flat-screens in the bathrooms, Frédéric Fekkai toiletries, Miele dishwashers) that you don’t want to leave. Most, anyway, are big enough to host a cocktail party. Dinner-overnight packages (with a bottle of wine) start at $355. 205 East 45th Street, 212-867-5100; thealexhotel.com.

Originally published in Philadelphia magazine, April 2006
 

Change text size
Print

Email

Write a comment
 
 

User comments

No users have posted comments on this article.

Post a comment

(* = required field.)
  • Please check to make sure that your referer is not blocked.


Subject line of your comment*
Your comments (200 words max)*
Email*
First name*
Last Name*
Enter the code shown below.
Visual CAPTCHA
This helps prevent automated form submissions.
Philadelphia It List

Green House

Visit our virtual room-by-room green guide for energy-saving tips and ideas.
 
 

Visit Florida

To plan your Sunshine State vacation visit our guide.
 
 

Luxury Car Guide

The 2009 Philadelphia International Auto Show is back and bigger than ever this year. Check out the latest models from BMW, Infiniti, Mercedes and Volvo. Luxury car shopping starts here.