I watched The Standard go up over the last year or two from the Hudson River Park without really knowing that it was to be a hotel. I admired its bent slabbiness-on-stilts silhouette, which we now see. The style of The Standard is basic friendly Mid-Century simplicity. The public areas have pedestal tables, flagstones and paper lamps; the rooms themselves are designed along a yacht theme with banquet seating and wood slats lining the walls and ceilings. In terms of color, the palette is fairly neutral — planes of warm wood, and red and yellow brick punctuate black and white, brown and grey. If you have a drink downstairs in the lounge you’re sitting on what look like Danish modern chairs in red and maroon.
But the park! Paris has one of these, too, an urban ribbon of trees floating above street level upon ancient train tracks. I had no idea how thrilling ours would be. I only went a few blocks, from the entrance at Gansevoort up to 18th Street, but you’re immersed in a constantly changing sea of urban vistas, involving plants, art and architecture, beautiful buildings and the sun slipping slowly into the Hudson. Thank goodness for smart urban development. The Highline is a new "Great Outdoors" for everyone in the city to enjoy.
New Yorkers — have you been to check out the Highline yet?
(Images: Michael Tavani and Mark Chamberlain)
- Mark Chamberlain, interior and decorative painter
Cool Hotel - I'd like to stay there next time I'm in NYC...
...unless I decide on the Maritime Hotel instead.
view bepsf's profile
So excited for the highline! I'm gonna try to check it out on Wednesday -- it's been the talk of Chelsea (my hood) for years!
view lz256's profile
I can see the Highline from my office. Now if it would just stop raining long enough for me to check it out...
view Lori's profile
anyone know where the little tables from the 7th picture came from? thanks!
view eriiikaa's profile
Not really wild about the hotel building itself, at least as depicted. It strikes me as an old, ugly office building. Way too institutional. Is it a conversion or did they build it that way on purpose?
The interiors and the park look very nice however.
view RichardinLA's profile
Walked the first part of the Highline yesterday. It's brilliant . . . the "theater" for watching traffic was inspired.
I stayed at The Standard over the weekend and can't recommend it. The design is more about looking good when you first walk in the room. Once you're actually staying in the space, you realize it consists of a thousand annoyances. Killer elevator, though.
view caslab's profile
The weather is supposed to clear up today, so maybe I'll swing by since I work in Meatpacking. Read about it on other blogs, looks nice.
view HardcoreSouma's profile