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Final List: NYC Hotels Permanently Closed Due To COVID

a close up of a chain and padlock

A little more than a year, ago, we posted a list of the (then) 18 hotels in New York City that had permanently closed due to COVID. These weren’t “on pause” like some hotels were for months or years. Instead, they formally announced they were closing up shop for good.

Here’s an update.

The good news

Happily, two of those 18 wound up reopening, after all!

Omni Berkshire Place, the 399-room hotel located at 21 E. 52nd. St. reopened its doors on November 1, 2021.

The classic hotel, which was known to host guests of Saturday Night Live in the early 1980s, originally opened in 1926. It was designed by Warren & Wetmore, which was the same architectural firm that designed Grand Central Terminal.

The historic property was set to close for good, citing COVID, after suspending operations in June 2020. They said the property was permanently closed.

Then, in October 2021, New York City passed legislation requiring hotels that closed or laid off 75% of their staff during the pandemic to provide severance for 30 weeks if they didn’t recall at least 25% of employees by Oct. 11 and reopen by Nov. 1. After that law was enacted, Crain’s reported that property owner TRT Holdings chose to reopen the Omni Berkshire Place that Nov. 1, rather than permanently shutter the hotel and pay the severance.

Hey, whatever works, right?

More good news – AKA Tribeca, located at 85 W. Broadway (on the corner of Chamber St.), reopened with a new name, Smyth Tribeca.

The bad news

Unfortunately, more hotels closed (or, more appropriately, we found out about more past closures) after our February, 2021 article.

And there are a handful that are still…questionable?

The final tally

With tourism continuing to grow, I think it’s safe to say at this point that any hotels that were going to close “because of COVID” have done so.

Our original article, from February 2021, listed 18 hotels in Manhattan that said they had “closed because of COVID.”

Two of those reopened, after all, bringing the total down to 16.

Five others had closed and we didn’t know it. That brings the total up to 21.

Plus 4 more than we have no idea what’s going on.

So somewhere between 21 and 25, I guess? Depending on how you look at it?

There were roughly 700 hotels in NYC in late 2019. The fact that only somewhere between 3% and 4% of them closed due to COVID? Pretty darn good, if you ask me.

Feature Photo: pxhere

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