New York City: Gansevoort Park Avenue (January 2017)




My spouse and I stayed at the Gansevoort Park Avenue for two evenings on a Saturday and Sunday night in mid-January 2017. We booked our room online using their website, which allows you to sign up for an account if you plan to stay again. Gansevoort operates other properties including a hotel in the Meatpacking District (where we stayed in July 2017; see our review titled “Hip and Happening Spot”), as well as in Miami, the Turks and Caicos, and the Dominican Republic.
As its name implies, the Gansevoort Park Avenue property is located at the corner of Park Avenue and East 29th Street in the Midtown East/Murray Hill/NoMad neighborhood, within view of the Empire State Building. Many shops, bars, and restaurants are located on the streets surrounding the hotel. 

Hotel amenities include a fitness center, spa, business center, street-level restaurant (called Asellina), and two shops (Lacoste and the Juice Press). The multi-story atrium lobby features herringbone floors, black-and-white plaid wingback chairs, and a gas-lit fireplace (which was popular on the cold and snowy weekend that we visited). One particularly notable feature is the indoor-outdoor heated rooftop pool that is open year round. In the wintertime, the tiny indoor area offers a few snugly arranged comfortable lounge groupings, whereas the outdoor area offers a bit more room with standard lounge chairs; a pool attendant provides towel service. The rooftop bar/restaurant called Plunge (which offers separate street/elevator access in the evenings) occupies nearly the entire top floor of the hotel adjacent to the pool deck. Party/event space features thousands of square feet of entertainment spread over three floors, including the Blue Room and the Red Room with multiple bars, wrap-around open-air terraces, a rooftop sundeck, and an al fresco fireplace. Wi-Fi is complimentary throughout the hotel. Some older hotel reviews indicate that an iPod and docking station are available in each room, but we did not have one. Nor does the hotel still provide complimentary rides via a Porsche Panamera. Valet parking is available for a fee (with no in-and-out privileges), and pets are also permitted for a charge. 


The hotel offers nearly 250 rooms and suites. Room types include superior king (350 square feet), deluxe king or deluxe double (370 square feet), grand deluxe king with balcony (525 square feet), Gansevoort suite (775 square feet, with a separate living room, two bathrooms, and balcony), Park Avenue suite (900 square feet, with a separate living room, two bathrooms, and balcony), and presidential suite (3800 square feet, featuring two levels, fireplace, terrace, dining area, and floor-to-ceiling windows). We were assigned Room 616, a Grand Deluxe King with a balcony that overlooked Park Avenue South. (We could see all the way north to Grand Central Terminal if we leaned out over the railing.) Our room was enormous by any standards, but particularly by Manhattan standards. It contained a king-size bed (with feather pillows and duvet) abutted by two nightstands, a large working desk with two chairs that could double as a dining table, a sofa, chair, side table, and coffee table arranged in a seating area (which was part of the room, not a separate room or separate alcove), and a step-out balcony (wide enough for several people to stand in a line, but not wide enough to hold chairs). Near the door to the room was a large closet (with robes, slippers, iron and ironing board, and electronic safe), a bar alcove (with weighted mini-bar but no wet bar sink), and the large bathroom (with a long dual vessel sink with storage on each side and below, an additional storage shelf below the mirror, toilet, separate soaking tub, and oversize glass shower. Room décor included colorful patterned bathroom tiles, cobalt pillows and blanket throw, fuchsia curtains, large windows, and high ceilings.

L’Occitane provides the toiletries (shampoo, conditioner, bath gel, body lotion, soap), but we did not receive replacements for our second night or at evening turndown, which meant that the hotel provided just one set of tiny bottles for two people for our entire stay. We received an evening turndown only on our first night, but not on the second night. (At our past stay at the Gansevoort Meatpacking, we received turndowns both nights, including a filled ice bucket, but we got no ice at this hotel on Park Avenue.) We did not receive a newspaper on either morning of our stay, although we are repeat Gansevoort guests. Our most serious problem was that the hotel could not supply any hot water from late afternoon until about midnight on our first night due to a broken pipe, which meant that we were unable to shower before dinner after a day of sightseeing. We informed the desk clerk about our issues at checkout, but he did nothing more than say he understood. (He could have at least offered us a complimentary drink at the bar as a gesture of goodwill.)

For the price per night that we paid to stay at the Gansevoort Park Avenue, we deserved better and more consistent service; being unable to shower without any amends offered will lead us to choose another brand next time.











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