New York Fashion Week opens the global fashion calendar each February and September, with 500+ designers showing at venues from Spring Studios to Lincoln Center before a global audience of editors, buyers, and celebrities. NYFW is the launchpad for America's most commercially powerful fashion brands and draws $600 million in economic impact to New York City. New York City hotels in the Meatpacking District, SoHo, and Midtown are the most popular choices for NYFW attendees.
A sanctuary of calm above the Fifth Avenue crowds. Sprawling suites with fireplaces, a three-story spa, and a Japanese-inflected restaurant that alone justifies the trip. The pinnacle of Manhattan luxury.
A literary-chic boutique tucked into the heart of the Village. Intimate rooms with brass fixtures, an espresso bar that doubles as a scene, and a location that puts you steps from Washington Square Park.
Brooklyn's coolest hotel delivers on every front — rooftop bar with Manhattan skyline views, a ground-floor taqueria that draws locals, and rooms that nail the industrial-meets-cozy aesthetic. The neighbourhood location means you're in the thick of Williamsburg's best restaurants and vintage shops.
Eco-luxury with genuinely spectacular views of the Manhattan skyline and Brooklyn Bridge. The rooftop pool is one of the best in the city, the sustainability credentials are real (not greenwashing), and DUMBO puts you walkable to Brooklyn Bridge Park and the waterfront.
A restored 1883 landmark with a soaring nine-story Victorian atrium that stops you in your tracks. Tom Colicchio's restaurant on the ground floor is legitimately excellent, and the Financial District location — once considered a drawback — now means peaceful weekends and easy access to the Brooklyn Bridge and Seaport District.
Straddling the High Line like a concrete periscope over the Hudson, The Standard is still one of Manhattan's most photogenic hotels. Floor-to-ceiling windows in every room, Le Bain rooftop bar, and a Meatpacking location that puts you at the doorstep of Chelsea Market and Whitney Museum.