At the Hotel Chelsea you can check out any time you like, but you won’t ever want to leave. With the recent opening of the rooftop spa on the eleventh floor of the hotel at 222 West 23rd Street, there are even more reasons to visit and linger.
The spa offers luxurious facials, massages, and other healing therapies such as reiki. And as a special treat for visitors and New York apartment dwellers, you can enjoy the lush green oasis of the rooftop garden after your treatment.
It’s not the same as living in the pyramid penthouse that used to be here (and is now the hotel’s fitness center), but you might hear the ethereal tinkling of laughter from past rooftop occupants and celebrants.
I felt it was my duty to you dear readers to splurge for the spa experience. My last facial was in the mists of time before the pandemic, so I was excited to receive some pampering, and I was not disappointed. My aesthetician, Elyse, began by giving me a stress-relieving foot soak and mini foot massage while she examined my face and devised a customized facial for my unique needs. Her touch was divine and for an hour I floated on a cloud of bliss. My skin was unusually clear, smooth, and plumpified for days after the treatment.
Afterwards, I rehydrated in the rooftop garden, then went downstairs to treat myself to a “Chelsea Morning” cocktail in the Lobby Bar—one of my favorite places in NYC. I stayed at the hotel and had my first brunch of the year in the Lobby Bar, and I brought my crew back here to shoot this month’s column. I love hanging out in the solarium at the back, and we did the shoot in the back garden. This shot is from my January stay, and you can see the Christmas wreath hung in front of the mirror:
When we arrived for the photo shoot, Amy and I ordered cocktails right away, but Phil—being more conscientious than I—abstained until the photos were taken. Then we shared exceptional crudités with saffron aioli and savory yogurt and the best fries in New York—delightfully skinny, salty, crispy and tender inside. I keep coming back for these fries and for the extraordinary truffle ice cream with truffle toffee and Maldon salt. Not just any salt—not the passé pink Himalayan salt—but salt gathered from the high-salinity banks of the River Blackwater in Essex, England! Hmm. Sounds a bit dodgy, actually!
If you have a fat wallet and the urge to buy into the mystique of the Hotel Chelsea, it’s a place to find sybaritic bliss. I’ve been fascinated with the hotel since I saw the 1986 film Sid and Nancy, and even more so after reading Patti Smith’s 2010 autobiography Just Kids. But it must be said that this lounge of luxury—eclectic though it is—is not quite in the spirit of the original hotel.
Founded with the highest social ideals for cooperative housing, and run for 43 years by Sidney Bard—who allowed literally starving artists to pay their rent in paintings—the hotel was a community of eclectic creatives who fought and loved and lived and died here.
Though some of the original residents still live at the hotel in rent-controlled apartments—and it’s still a place to inspire artists such as this humble author and billionaires like Taylor Swift—today’s starving artists wouldn’t be able to afford a carrot here.
I want to love it, I do love it, but it leaves a strange taste in my mouth, like the lingering twang of the truffle ice cream.
A version of this article first appeared in Chelsea News and other papers in the Straus News group.
Style Notes
- Popsicle-toned chartreuse double silk georgette blouse and fuchsia 4-ply silk crepe miniskirt with silk chiffon trim from Andrea T New York at 147 West 35th Street (by appointment only).
- Ballet-slipper pink Prada 5 1/2″ satin pumps from the delightful Collette’s Basement, 10 Main Street, Southampton.
Thank you for introducing me to another place I want to visit on my next trip to the Big Apple. I need to try those fries (and maybe a facial). I too remember the hotel from Syd and Nancy. Thanks for sharing something new and old! You make a lovely popsicle.
Yes, we must go to the Chelsea Hotel! You will love it. 🙂 Thanks for the popsicle reference! 💜💚🧡💛
What a gem. Real old world charm. And the Hotel is also quite special. Thanks, as always, for sharing a gorgeous gam gander. Always a treat!
Thanks, Bruce! I just found them there, attached to my body. haha Of course high heels were invented to enhance the gam gander experience!
Love the Chelsea Hotel but somehow never noticed the store front
for the Gramercy Typewriter Company. Eager to visit it on my next
trip to the Hotel.
I hope your next visit will include me! Looking forward to playing the piano for you again. 🙂
P.S. I want to try the serving of crudités and fries. I guess that counts as a balanced lunch, right?
Absolutely!!
Absolutely!
Dear Karen,
You are the coolest, chic-est woman in all of NYC! The popsicle togs? Too terrific for words! Compliments to Andrea for creating such a confection and to YOU for wearing it so well!
And how nice to see the reincarnated Hotel Chelsea. We lived on West 23rd Street for many years, and knew it before its renaissance. Someone had a vision, thank goodness, and it still lives on. Thank you for the tour, Karen!
Thank you Mrs. Reno. You are equally cool and chic, I must hasten to say! So lucky that you knew the hotel back in the day!
Great pics, love the popsicle ensemble! Now I’ll have ZZ Top in my head for the rest of the day. 🙂
Thanks, Tracey! Which ZZ Top song was it?
So interesting to read about all the new amenities at the latest incarnation of the Chelsea Hotel!
I love the lobby bar too–and the rooftop garden looks lovely.
I do wish the hotel would bring back a wonderful performance idea that was featured there in 2010– a performance called “Room 103”–about poet Dylan Thomas–who –after collapsing on the floor of the White Horse Tavern following a passionate evening of whiskey consumption and poetry recitation–was taken back to his room (103) at the Chelsea Hotel where he met his end… the play was performed in Room 103 of the Chelsea–it was amazing to be there and to see it–…below is a description in the original performance ‘Playbill’:
https://playbill.com/article/evocative-evening-about-dylan-thomas-to-play-hotel-chelsea-com-166174
Wow, Pat, that is fascinating! I wish I had been there for that performance! Thanks for sharing.
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Thanks, Zaphy! The Chelsea Hotel is endlessly fascinating–we will never get all the answers but our curiosity about the hotel and its denizens is a joy nonetheless.