Hotel Deauville (Manhattan) Explained
Hotel Deauville was a hotel at 103 East 29th Street in Rose Hill, Manhattan, New York City, built in 1901.[1] It was a seven-story brick and stone structure influenced by Beaux-Arts architecture, and was originally an apartment hotel known as Hatfield House.[2] [3] A modern 19-story hotel,[4] designed by Arkan Zeytinoglu Architects and developed by Frank Savino, with 120 rooms, will replace the Hotel Deauville.[5] [6]
References
40.7439°N -73.983°W
Notes and References
- Book: Living It Up: A Guide to the Named Apartment Houses of New York . Thomas E. . Norton . Jerry E. . Patterson . 1984 . Atheneum . New York . 120 . 9780689114366 . DEAUVILLE HOTEL 103 East 29th Street in 1901; the front with columns and an ugly modern marquee.
- Web site: Historic resource inventory form. New York State Office of Parks, Recreation & Historic Preservation.. August 25, 2017.
- News: Hu . Lydia . January 26, 2019 . Manhattan Residents Hope To Save 100-Year Old Hotel . NY1 . September 11, 2022.
- News: Rizzi. Nicholas. January 25, 2019. ‘Glass-and-Steel Piece of Crap’ Could Replace Historic Hotel Deauville in Murray Hill. Commercial Observer. February 24, 2023.
- News: Young. Michael. Pruznick. Matt. February 24, 2023. Demolition Complete for 19-Story Hotel at 103 East 29th Street in NoMad, Manhattan. New York Yimby. February 24, 2023.
- News: Hotel Deauville – LOST GEM. Manhattan Sideways. February 24, 2023.