“ Get high at the city's most towering 8 hotels, here are the tallests hotels which have panaromic views for miles and amenitites that will make you feel the city is off limits ...”
Look up and up, and up: This isn’t just the tallest hotel in New York City — but in the country. In January 2014, Marriott opened this combined 378-room Courtyard hotel and 261-suite Residence Inn hotel in Midtown Manhattan on Broadway.
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BOOK NOWThe New York Palace splashily reopened in 2013 after a $140 million renovation, and is once again living up to its name. The handsome hotel is a striking blend of old new. The historic Villard Mansion — with a striking courtyard — is at the base, but it's The Towers, a modern extension that shoots up 55 stories, that gives the Palace its tremendous height. Just a 5-minute walk from shopping on Fifth Avenue.
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BOOK NOWLooming elegantly over lower Manhattan, the 55-story Millenium Hilton is proof of New York City’s ability to rebound after 9/11. The building was extensively damaged on September 11 but fully rebuilt to open its doors in 2003. Looking to impress a client? Host your meeting on the Presidential Suite on the 55th floor, which features an airy event space with phenomenal views of the Hudson River and the glittering NYC skyline.
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BOOK NOWThe flashiest newcomer to Times Square in 2013 wasn’t another giant neon sign or the latest Broadway show. It was the 54-story Hyatt Times Square, Manhattan's largest new Hyatt in more than 30 years — and the tallest newly built, freestanding Hyatt hotel in the United States.
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BOOK NOWSpace may be at a premium across New York City, but you wouldn't know it here. Everything about this all-suite hotel is big. Originally built as a residential building, it was later converted from apartments into suites, each starting at an impressive 500 square feet, and all designed by esteemed interior designer David Collins.
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BOOK NOWThe height advantage is evident from the moment the elevators deposit you in the lobby: The Mandarin Oriental’s first floor is the 35th floor of the Time Warner Center in Columbus Circle. The views of Central Park and beyond start here and get better the higher you go. And the Mandarin Oriental maximizes its sky. Among the notable rooms to book: the Hudson River Room, which takes in a wide sweep from the Statue of Liberty.
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BOOK NOWNot surprisingly, a Trump building makes this list. The Donald is, after all, the master of excess. His sophisticated hotel across the street from Central Park has both rooms and suites designed by Ivanka Trump, with floor-to-ceiling windows and marble bathrooms, as well as private condos, which occupy the top floors.
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BOOK NOWNot only is the Four Seasons one of NYC’s best-known hotels, but it’s also among the tallest. The iconic, I.M. Pei-designed hotel soars over 57th Street in Midtown, affording dazzling views in every direction, from Central Park to both rivers. Want to spot a celebrity? Park yourself in the high-ceilinged marble lobby and a sighting is almost guaranteed.
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47th - 50th Streets - Rockefeller Center station on
the IND Sixth Avenue Line offers service on the
B D F M trains. An underground concourse
connects the station with the buildings of
Rockefeller Center.
The 49th Street station on the BMT Broadway
Line offers service on the N Q R trains, and is
accessible via a part-time booth at Seventh
Avenue and 47th Street at the south end of the
station.