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- Newsgroups: rec.travel
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!cs.utexas.edu!torn!skule.ecf!epas!sfysh
- From: sfysh@epas.utoronto.ca (Stephanie Moskal Fysh)
- Subject: Hotel Review: The Paramount, New York City
- Organization: University of Toronto - EPAS
- Date: Sun, 3 Jan 1993 22:32:44 GMT
- Message-ID: <1993Jan3.223244.25633@epas.toronto.edu>
- Sender: news@epas.toronto.edu (USENET)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: epas.utoronto.ca
- Lines: 59
-
- And now for something rather different: a hotel review.
-
- Over the holidays, I spent 3 nights at the recently reopened Paramount
- Hotel in New York City. It's right in the theatre district, on 46th
- between 7th and 8th. If you've been around there and can't recall
- seeing it, that could be because it has *no* hotel sign outside.
- You're supposed to know. It's that kind of place.
-
- The hotel is *very* modern (like stepping into one of the design
- exhibits at the MOMA - all 1990s). The doormen wear nice black suits
- and Tshirts instead of looking like throwbacks to the 19th century.
- The small newstand in the lobby sells only black and white photographs
- for postcards. There are fresh red roses stuck into walls.
-
- The rooms are also very modern - except for the baths, which have
- marvellous old fixtures and are quite wonderful. And the radiators (I
- never did quite figure out how to work mine). The beds are large and
- very comfortable, with plenty of pillows and rolls for reading
- (excellent reading light) or watching TV or a video -- every room has
- a VCR. Oh yes - and the sinks are conical stainless steel.
-
- The standard-level rooms are quite small (it was a bit of a squeeze
- between the bottom of the bed and the wardrobe), but I found it good enough.
-
- Off the lobby, there's a Dean and Delucca Espresso Bar with takeout -
- very well-priced, and the tea was acceptable too. A good option for
- breakfast. Also off the lobby is a very comfortable cocktail bar. On
- the mezzanine level all around the lobby (almost every table overlooks
- it) is the hotel restaurant, which was moderately priced with a small
- wine list and a decent beer list. The food was quite good. Anything
- on the restaurant menu is also available room service with a $2.50
- room service fee (except on continental breakfast, movie snacks, and
- liquor). Next to the hotel is a fancy, expensive brasserie.
-
- The hotel has a fitness room and children's play room, neither of
- which I saw. They can also arrange for a sitter. And they are
- planning to open a nightclub, which given the atmosphere and general
- hipness-quotient of the place could be quite good.
-
- The only drawbacks I could see were the size of the standard-level
- rooms (including small closets and only three drawers in the wardrobe,
- and just a small table without a desk), and that some people might
- find the lighting levels too low (though stylishly so).
-
- The biggest plus is the price: regular prices are $155-$200 a night,
- with weekend packages available. There are also luxury rooms, and
- probably a few luxury suites (since apparently Madonna and David Bowie
- have both stayed there). Service is excellent and very prompt - our
- room service and video order were delivered right away (Almodovar, even).
-
- All in all, a good deal for a high-quality hotel conveniently located
- in the theatre district (between the museum district and the hipper
- areas of lower Manhattan). I highly recommend it.
-
- --
- Stephanie Moskal Fysh | "Today an eighteenth-century scholar may well
- Dept. of English | be Jewish, female, or generally irreverent."
- Univ. of Toronto | - Lawrence Lipking
- (sfysh@epas.utoronto.ca) |
-