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Tag: Hotels

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A Sordid Little NYC Gem Hits the Market for $25 Million: The Liberty Inn

Downtown in NYC’s West Village neighborhood sits a 7,000 SF structure beside the West Side Highway.  It is the last hourly rate hotel ($95 for two hours and $155 for six hours in case you are in the area) in Manhattan’s meatpacking district—a relic with a rich history of sordid behavior. 

The hotel is billed as the “most sexiest” in the city (sophomoric and clunky to say nothing of the grammar) providing a sanctuary for bouts of afternoon passion, clandestine affairs and lunchtime quickies.  All activities that remain elusive to this humble author suggesting I may have picked the wrong profession. This kinky little spot was once known as the Strand Hotel, a boardinghouse for sailors. Reporters even once rented rooms to file reports about survivors of the Titanic when they arrived at Pier 54.  In the 1960s, it was known as the Hide-a-Way Motel (who names these things), which later shared space with a gay nightclub, the Anvil (where drag performances by the likes of Ruby Rims, Candy Stevens and The Famous Yuba entertained patrons). 

The Liberty is designed with a narrow purpose as evidenced by room designs and certain unique fixtures.  Certain rooms are bathed in red light, filled with erotic wall art, have hot tubs and ceiling mirrors presumably reflecting back at you all of your physical shortcomings and life’s missteps. You can even find “The Liberator” at the Liberty Inn, a black stump-like apparatus used for lovers to contort themselves into imaginative and physically challenging positions. 

The owner, Edward Raboy, who uses the alias Robert Boyd—and, why not, when in this line of business—is the son of the owner of the Hide-a-Way (it’s true apples stay close to the tree when they fall).  Raboy acknowledges the West Village has changed dramatically from its wilder days where ample drugs and meatpacking of all kinds was considered groovy.  In his view, the Liberty Inn no longer fits within the current context of the gentrified West Village (or does it) and, as Raboy explains “it’s been a fabulous run” but its time for him to run along and let the next chapter of the storied hotel be told.  

Vadukul, Alex. “For Sale: The ‘sexiest’ Hourly Rate Hotel in Manhattan.” The New York Times, 10 Aug. 2022, www.nytimes.com/2022/08/10/style/hourly-rate-hotel-manhattan.html. 
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New York City is Back Baby! Not Quite but the Hotel Chelsea Is

Longing for the days of celebrity sightings, illicit drugs and carnal pleasure in the heart of New York City’s Chelsea neighborhood? Turns out the historic Hotel Chelsea—a previous magnet for painters, actors, dancers, novelists, playwrights and musicians and a whole lot of debauchery—is opening its doors again after a rough decade of contentious renovation, developer turnover, countless lawsuits, a stop-work order and a pandemic. Current ownership took a “gentle and…respectable” approach to the restoration filling the lobby with the artwork of current and former tenants. There will be a new lounge with a brass-railed bar, a grand piano, as well as an updated version of the Spanish-themed restaurant El-Quijote that’s been “tuned up” a bit.

The hotel will be a blend of 155 rentable rooms and more than 40 permanent residents, who have been “allowed” to remain because ownership likes “the mix” of guests and full-time residents (i.e., owners could not get around NYC’s rent stabilization rules). Described by one famous resident as a place “haunted by dark creative forces” but also a place with “romanticism,” we look forward to what the next century has in store for the Chelsea. Don’t let us down.

Cheshes, Jay. “How the Historic Hotel Chelsea Has Kept Its New York Cool.” The Wall Street Journal, 26 Apr. 2022, www.wsj.com/articles/hotel-chelsea-new-york-11650976217?mod=hp_listc_pos1.
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