Rooms
Due to a missing window lever that had broken the window’s seal and
exposed the room to the city’s incessant cacophony, we were very
quickly offered our choice of either a similar room at the hotel’s
rear—or a high-floor suite facing the street. Was there any
question as to which we’d choose? That suite—number 60, on the
sixth floor—was exactly the sort of
Manhattan
pied à terre people dream about and covet. With its artwork
by French photographer Guy Bourdin, and Eero Saarinen inspired tulip
chairs and table, as well as two immense flat-screen TV’s, iPod
docking station, upholstered bench, maple burl coffee table, and
animal hide on the gray carpet, the three-room suite was ready for
its close-up in Architectural Digest. The oversized
black-tiled bathroom evoked an updated “classic six” Manhattan
apartment with its combination of classic and cool style. The
luscious toiletries were by fresh—and the white towels so plush and
clean fragranced as to merit repeated
inhalations. As for housekeeping, the
attention to cleanliness was impeccable.
Public Spaces
Designed by Stephen Sclaroff as a sort of homage to those sunken
living rooms seen in Bond films from the Sixties, the well-edited
intimate lobby is the sort of urban sanctuary where iPods and
Macbooks are de rigueur as ambitious artsy types stare
through the plate glass window across 58th Street at the Time Warner
Center. Off the lobby is the Blue
Ribbon Bar, an oasis of Asian calm and an
extension of the in-house restaurant, Blue
Ribbon Sushi Bar & Grill, yet another of the
successful chefs-at-rest Blue Ribbon
refuges. It’s the sort of place that
percolates with insider energy at two
a.m.—and you’re happy to be there, soaking
up culinary secrets.
Breakfast
Is served in the Blue Ribbon Sushi Bar & Grill until ten-thirty
am—an hour that found us luxuriating in the heavenly bed
upstairs—and therefore, we took breakfast, er—brunch, elsewhere.
Staff
Accommodating, to say the least—given how quickly both the front
desk manager and others responded to our plight with the
aforementioned inoperative room window. Furthermore, the doorboys
and the deskgirls were as cheerful as they were adorable—often
releasing the elevator for us, rather than
forcing us to use our room cards. And
whenever we needed anything in our luxuriant
suite—hangars, towels, facecloths—their
attention to our needs was immediate.
Who wouldn’t want to hire them all to staff
one’s own home?
Location
Perfection. Absolutely perfect. A quick walk to the theatres, and
on the fringe of the Park, and across the street from Whole Foods,
and—really, let’s face it—this location is exactly where you’d ask
your realtor to search for your own
Manhattan pied à terre.
Overview
With only 88 guest rooms and suites, 6 Columbus radiates a welcome
calm amidst the manic madness of midtown. There’s a genuine warmth
emanating from the staff, which complements the feeling one has of
entering a hotel that appears to double as a members club for
artists and bon vivants. And yet, that sense of belonging at
6 Columbus is low-key and without attitude: the consequence of a
confidence that comes from believing in what you’re doing—and doing
it right.
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