Check In, Check Out
New York City: Hotel 17
By CHRISTOPHER SOLOMON
Published: January 7, 2007
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James at the Front Desk
Shiho Fukada for
The New York Times
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THE BASICS
There are not many hotels in Manhattan with reasonably priced rooms,
and perhaps fewer still with an interesting back story. The 120-room Hotel
17 has both. Woody Allen used the different-as-snowflakes rooms, with
their throwback feel, as the setting for his film "Manhattan Murder
Mystery." A pre-fame Madonna lived in this building, as did the singer
Jon Secada. Today the reigning diva is Amanda Lepore, a blond knockout
of somewhat hazy gender who is a staple of the downtown New York club
scene. It's a cozy hotel, even a little cramped, with slender hallways
and a shoebox of a lobby that urges visitors out into the city.
THE LOCATION
The hotel, on the Lower East Side, is centrally positioned to get to the
East Village (three blocks away), Union Square (three blocks) and Gramercy
Park (four blocks). It's also just a few blocks from the major Union Square-14th
Street subway station, where multiple lines stop.
THE ROOMS
It's easy to see why the rooms of Hotel 17 have been popular photo shoot
locations for magazines like Vogue. My corner room on the eighth floor
had adjacent walls with different wallpapers, neither of which quite matched
the bedspread. Red blinds. Blue carpet. The dark furniture had the heavy
look of an older era, and the molding was lacquered so heavily it seemed
encased in amber. Everything combined to give a pleasantly noir-ish feel.
Despite a renovation completed in 2005 that tried to update the look while
keeping the place's flavor carpeting in the hallways, modern phones
in the rooms some shabbiness here can't pass for shabby-chic: wallpaper
was peeling in one spot; the carpet had a ripple. And yet I've stayed
in rooms that cost twice as much that weren't so clean. Moreover, the
comfortable, unpretentious mattress did its job and delivered the sleep
I'd hoped for.
THE BATHROOMS
The hotel is predominantly shared-bath anywhere from two to four
rooms a floor share a toilet/shower/tub. This potentially unpleasant arrangement
is rescued by two happy facts: the tiled bathrooms were all completely
renovated in bright tiles by late 2005, and they're kept immaculate by
a crew around the clock. (Now if only those bath towels were more generous,
in case you forget the hotel-supplied Breck shampoo across the hall.)
Most rooms have also have their own sink and hair dryer.
THE CROWD
About 30 full-time tenants like Ms. Lepore live at Hotel 17, which is
also partly an apartment building. "Most of them are nice,"
the general manager said. I never encountered any celebrity tenants in
the small lobby during my stay, but I did see a parade of Europeans, and
some British tourists in their late 20s who marched to their rooms or
headed out to experience Gotham. Why so many? Simply the good rates, and
perhaps also a cultural ease with the notion of sharing a W.C. with strangers.
AMENITIES
This is an old-school, tourist-class hotel. No business center. No fitness
center. No day spa. But as the manager said helpfully, "We have an
ice machine on the first floor."
ROOM SERVICE
No restaurant or room service.
THE BOTTOM LINE
The motto over the door could be: "You don't come to New York City
to stay in your hotel room." A clean, safe, offbeat place to crash
for a night or two without wiping out your I.R.A. but not the place
for a snuggly anniversary weekend with your sweetie. Doubles starting
at $99 low season (January to mid-March) with shared bath, up to $200
in high season (June into October); 225 East 17th Street, 212-475-2845;
Hotel
17
New
York Times
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