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The St Regis Hotel - New York Search
A 1904 Beaux Arts landmark in the heart of midtown Manhattan, The St. Regis Hotel, New York provides the atmosphere and attentive service found only in the most gracious residences of that era. Yet it still keeps up with the finest modern amenities, such as High Speed Internet Access available in all guest and meeting rooms. Its 256 guest rooms and suites feature Louis XVI-style furniture, crystal chandeliers suspended from high ceilings, deeply carved crown moldings and wainscoting, marble baths, and silk wall coverings.Elegant furnishings and gracious service have helped rank The St. Regis Hotel, New York among the top hotels in the world for over a decade. Most recently, our hotel was named one of the "Top 75 Hotels in the United States" by Cond Nast Traveler, as well as to their 2004 and 2005 Gold Lists and a 2004 Readers' Choice winner, Travel + Leisure magazine also named us one of the "World's Best" in 2004. We were also awarded the Mobil Travel Guide Five-Star Award and AAA Five Diamond Award for 2006 - the highest honors from the industry's most discerning rating organizations.We are also delighted to announce that The St. Regis Hotel, New York was named the "Number One Hotel in the World" in 2005 by the readers of Institutional Investor magazine. The hotel is the first New York hotel to win the coveted top spot in the survey's 25-year history.
Location Highlights:Local Attractions - * Wempe Jewelers - 0.1 mi/0.1 km * The Disney Store - 0.1 mi/0.1 km * Henri Bendel - 0.1 mi/0.1 km * Tiffany's - 0.1 mi/0.2 km * Broadway Theater District - 0.1 mi/0.2 km * Bergdorf Goodman - 0.1 mi/0.2 km * Museum of Modern Art - 0.2 mi/0.3 km * F.A.O. Schwartz - 0.2 mi/0.3 km * Carnegie Hall - 0.2 mi/0.3 km * Central Park - 0.3 mi/0.4 km * St. Patrick's Cathedral - 0.3 mi/0.5 km * Rockefeller Center - 0.3 mi/0.5 km * Bloomingdale's - 0.6 mi/0.9 km * Grand Central Station - 0.8 mi/1.3 km * Empire State Building - 1.0 mi/1.6 km * Lord and Taylor - 1.1 mi/1.7 km * Penn Station - 1.4 mi/2.2 km * Greenwich Village - 2.0 mi/3.2 km * Wall Street - 3.0 mi/4.8 km * Chinatown - 3.0 mi/4.8 km * Little Italy - 3.0 mi/4.8 km * South Street Seaport - 3.0 mi/4.8 km * Battery Park - 4.0 mi/6.4 km; Local Corporate Offices - * Coca Cola - 0.1 mi/0.1 km * IBM - 0.1 mi/0.1 km * AT&T - 0.1 mi/0.1 km * Sony Corp. - 0.1 mi/0.1 km * Columbia Pictures - 0.1 mi/0.1 km * Merrill Lynch - 0.1 mi/0.1 km * General Motors - 0.2 mi/0.3 km * Citibank - 0.2 mi/0.3 km * Warner Brothers/Time Warner - 0.3 mi/0.4 km * Saks Fifth Avenue - 0.3 mi/0.5 km * Walt Disney - 0.3 mi/0.5 km; Airport Info: La Guardia International Airport - 12 Miles; JFK International Airport - 16 Miles; Newark International - 16 Miles; Nearby Airports: * La Guardia International Airport - 12 Miles* JFK International Airport - 16 Miles* Newark International - 16 MilesNearby Cities:* Moonachie - 6 Miles* Teterboro - 7 Miles* Englewood Cliffs - 8 Miles* Hackensack - 9 Miles* Saddlebrook - 11 Miles* Rochelle Park - 11 Miles* Paramus - 13 Miles* Parsippany - 28 Miles; Areas Served: New York, Moonachie, Teterboro, Englewood Cliffs, Hackensack, Saddlebrook, Rochelle Park, Paramus, Parsippany; More Details
What can one say about New York City that hasn't already been said?
This is the "Big Apple," the city that never sleeps, and is truly the cultural
and financial heart of the United States of America.How did the city get the name of the "Big Apple?" No one knows for sure, and there are many stories suggesting origins, ranging from depression- era former financiers making ends meet by selling apples on the streets while dressed in full suits to jazz musicians landing a gig at the popular Big Apple club in Harlem. The city has adopted an "official" version that ties the name to horse racing: Stable hands in New Orleans referred to a trip to a New York racecourse as the "Big Apple" as the greatest reward for any thoroughbred.
Broadway originates from Lower Manhattan at Bowling Green and ends in Albany, making it one of the world's longest streets at 150 miles (241 kilometers). Its official name is Highway 9, but it was originally called Bloomingdale Road and began at what is now 23rd Street and stretched to 114th Street. It was built to handle the increasing commercial traffic back when Manhattan was mostly farms and rolling countryside and when Bloomingdale was a large producer of tobacco. Bloomingdale Road later became the Boulevard and later still was changed to Broadway.
Columbia University originated on the East Side. In the 1890s it moved to the Upper West End's Morningside Heights, taking over the grounds of the Bloomingdale Lunatic Asylum.
The City was briefly (1789-1790) the capital of the US and was state capital until 1797. By 1790 it was the largest city in the US, and the 1825 opening of the Erie Canal led to even greater expansion. In 1898 a new charter made Greater New York a metropolis of five boroughs (counties).



