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Sad List: All The Hotels In New York City That Have Closed For Good Due To COVID

a large building with chandelier and stairs

The 2019 Novel Coronavirus has hurt the entire travel industry for over a year now, and countless travel agencies, tour operators, restaurants and airlines have closed their doors due to lack of business. For many, the closure is (or at least hopefully is) just a pause, with plans to reopen when things are better. But for some, their closing was a solid “goodbye forever.”

The names of some travel and travel-related entities that have closed for good are well known. TUI travel service in the U.K. (which then reopened, but under a new owner who merely bought the name). The Cheers replica bar in Boston. The Standard in Los Angeles. And, of course, thousands of restaurants. Business Insider says that roughly 17% of U.S. restaurants have closed permanently since the start of the pandemic.

In 2018, New York City saw about 65.2 million tourists, who spent about $44 billion during their visits. Although tourism isn’t the only way New York makes money (as an idea, according to Center for an Urban Future, before COVID, tourists were responsible for about 24% of all credit card sales at NYC restaurants and drinking places), it’s a big moneymaker for thousands of entities in the Big Apple.

In 2019, there were roughly 123,000 hotel rooms in New York City. Since COVID, about 200 of the city’s 700 hotels have closed their doors. Most, at this point, consider themselves to be “on pause,” and hope to reopen sometime in the future. However, these hotel properties in Manhattan announced in 2020 that they would (and subsequently have) close(d) permanently:

NAME ADDRESS ROOMS
AKA Tribeca 85 W. Broadway 100
AKA United Nations 234 E. 46th St. 95
AKA Wall Street 84 William St. 132
Best Western Bowery Hanbee 231 Grand St. 102
Comfort Inn Manhattan Bridge 63 Chrystie St. 60
Courtyard New York Manhattan/Herald Square 8 Herald Square 167
Excelsior Hotel 45 W. 81st. St. 116
Hilton Times Square 234 W. 42nd St. 460
Hudson Hotel 356 W. 58th St. 876
Marmara Manhattan 301 E. 94th St. 109
Maxwell Hotel 541 Lexington Ave. 698
New York Marriott East Side 525 Lexington Ave. 636
Novotel Times Square 226 W. 52nd St. 480
Omni Berkshire Place 21 E. 52nd. St. 399
Roosevelt Hotel 45 E. 45th St. 1,015
Salisbury Hotel 123 W. 57th St. 196
The Blakely 136 W. 55th St. 118
W Hotel 8 Albany St. 217

All told, that’s a total of 18 hotels, with 5,976 rooms. It figures out to be 3.5% of all hotels in NYC and 5.8% of all hotel rooms.

Of the 18:

Notes Of Interest:

Frankly, when I read that only 18 hotels had closed permanently, I was kind of relieved – I really thought, a year in, that it would be a significantly higher amount. However, the closure of any hotel is sad, if for no other reason than the loss of jobs. Granted, more than one admittedly appeared to be not doing very well even before COVID hit, so the closure of at least some of them was probably not super surprising.

As a fan of architecture and history, I always feel particularly sad when old hotels close their doors. For those classic buildings built in the 1920s and 1930s, I hope they’re eventually sold and can continue to be used for lodging. I would love to see them reimagined into some semblance of their former glories, rather than razed and turned into parking garages or modern office buildings.

Reference: PWC.com

Feature Photo: The Roosevelt Hotel

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