Waldorf Astoria New York sets its course for the future
As New York’s first skyscraper hotel, the Waldorf Astoria has been synonymous with effortless luxury and glamour for nearly a century. This Art Deco landmark now proudly takes its place in a world-renowned skyline, but its future was not always so concrete.
The first Waldorf Astoria actually began life as two hotels – The Waldorf and The Astoria – each owned by two feuding members of the fabulously wealthy Astor family. Built on half a block of prime real estate, between 5th Avenue and 33rd Street, “Mrs Astor’s’ 13-storey ‘Waldorf” opened in 1893, gaining an instant reputation for opulence. It was soon outshone, however, by her nephew William Waldorf Astor’s 17-storey “Astoria”, built right next door, in 1897. When the disgruntled Mrs Astor moved uptown the two hotels eventually merged, joined by an alley to form what was at the time the world’s largest hotel.
Playing host to Gilded Age tycoons, American high society and Hollywood stars, it became known as the spot for ladies in the latest couture to rendezvous in comfort and style. It maintained its position at the heart of New York society until the 1920s, when the city’s centre of gravity shifted north.
By the late 1920s, 33rd and 5th in Midtown was no longer a fashionable location. In 1929 the owners sold the land and the hotel was pulled down to make way for the Empire State Building. The manager, Lucius Boomer, procured the rights to the name “Waldorf-Astoria” for a single dollar and, together with a developer and a builder, purchased the site where the Waldorf-Astoria as we know it currently sits. They chose a Park Avenue location for proximity to the recently built Grand Central Station, hedging their bets that, over time, the new hotel would transform a residential area into a booming commercial hub. With 1,400 rooms to fill, this was a major gamble. In fact, they broke ground just weeks before the stock market crash that plunged America into depression.
The build took only 14 months, a major feat as the tallest and largest hotel in the world. Opening to rapturous reviews in 1931, it quickly became the place to be seen in New York, hosting major events in the society calendar and celebrity weddings. This was New York’s living room – where the city came to celebrate. Some even set up home in the Waldorf Astoria as permanent residents. Celebrities like Cole Porter, Marilyn Monroe and Frank Sinatra all moved in, Sinatra for a reported $1m a year. A piano of Porter’s, lovingly restored by its Brooklyn maker Steinway, remains in situ.
A new incarnation of an icon
After nearly a century in its current location, a $1bn (£719.4m) renovation is currently underway for reopening as a hotel with private residences in early 2023. Having rather fallen out of fashion, key to today’s project is revitalising the building and re-igniting the spirit that so rooted it to the American modern age.
Once complete, the iconic property will include 375 condominium residences and 375 rooms of the Waldorf Astoria New York hotel.
Jean-Louis Deniot, the renowned designer behind many of the world’s most luxurious private homes, has reinvigorated the Waldorf’s original Art Deco interiors with contemporary luxury, creating modern living within its historic structure, ranging from studios to two unique penthouses situated in The Towers.
The space has more than 50,000 sq ft of residential amenities, the centrepiece of which is the 25m Starlight Pool. It overlooks Park Avenue and is lit by a restored skylight, an architectural feature lost for 70 years and now returned to its glorious former purpose.
Private bars, salons and game rooms abound, a tipping of the hat to the celebrated entertaining spaces that once drew New York society to the original hotel.
As so it returns, brick by brick, to become a new incarnation of an icon; it nods to history but the Waldorf Astoria has now set its course for the future.
The Towers of the Waldorf Astoria New York will offer 375 residences starting from $1.8m (£1.26m). Occupancy is projected for early 2023. For more information see waldorftowers.nyc
William Leigh www.theweek.co.uk