honoluluadvertiser.com

Sponsored by:

Comment, blog & share photos

Log in | Become a member
The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Sunday, March 9, 2008

New York City's celebrated Plaza Hotel reopens doors

By Beth J. Harpaz
Associated Press Travel Editor

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Every floor of The Plaza has a white-gloved butler such as Bruno Soubirous, above. The legendary lodging place, sometimes called the world's most famous hotel, is open after a three-year absence.

DIANE BONDAREFF | Associated Press

spacer spacer
Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Harpist Sylvia Kowalczuk played in the Palm Court during The Plaza's reopening on March 1. The hotel has undergone a three-year, $400 million renovation.

DIANE BONDAREFF | Associated Press

spacer spacer

NEW YORK — Hundreds of New Yorkers and tourists flocked to The Plaza Hotel earlier this month for the landmark's reopening after a three-year, $400 million renovation.

"They say this place is the world's most famous hotel," said doorman Freddy Davila, who worked for the hotel for 15 years until it closed in 2005. "It's wonderful to be back," he said as he welcomed visitors up the red-carpeted steps.

"We just had to see inside," said Owen Mathieu, visiting from Marblehead, Mass. "We've seen it in the movies. Everybody's heard of it."

The Plaza, a National Historic Landmark overlooking Central Park, first opened in 1907. Marilyn Monroe was photographed here, and guests included the Beatles and Frank Lloyd Wright. Its ballroom was the setting of Truman Capote's "Black and White Ball" and the wedding of Richard Nixon's daughter Julie. Scenes were shot at the hotel for movies including "North by Northwest," "Barefoot in the Park," "Crocodile Dundee" and "Home Alone 2." Past owners include Conrad Hilton and Donald Trump.

The Plaza's current owners, Elad Properties, initially planned to convert all guest rooms into condominiums, but the plan was opposed by preservationists and the hotel workers' union. Negotiations with Mayor Michael Bloomberg led to a deal that resulted in 282 hotel rooms, down from the original 805, and 181 apartments.

OLD AND NEW: The restored features include gleaming mosaic floors, sparkling chandeliers and gold-trimmed ceilings.

  • Also restored is the stained-glass ceiling in the Palm Court dining room near the lobby. It had been replaced in the 1940s by a plaster ceiling, "so it hasn't been seen in most people's lifetimes," said Sarah Carroll, director of preservation for the city's Landmarks Preservation Commission.

  • A new Champagne Bar in the lobby offers cocktails, champagne by the glass ($25-$60) or by the bottle, up to $3,350 for a magnum.

  • The famed Oak Bar will be back in service in time for the May 10 "Grand Opening."

  • Renovated guest rooms bridge the old world and the new with flat-screen TVs, electronic key cards, iPod docks and digital touch screens that let guests change lighting and temperature or call for assistance. Old-fashioned opulence include faucets plated with 24-karat gold, mosaic bathroom floors and white-gloved butlers, one per floor, on call 24 hours.

    IF YOU GO: Rates for the hotel rooms start at $1,000 a night. "It's not about the price, it's about the experience," said Bill Carroll, a professor at Cornell University's School of Hotel Administration.

    The Plaza Hotel is at Fifth Avenue at Central Park, New York, NY 10019, 800-804-6835, www.theplaza.com.