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Review: the brand new Virgin Hotels New York City

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This is our review of the new Virgin Hotels New York City hotel.

Well, Richard Branson really does get around. Just over a week after Rob met him in Edinburgh to open the new Virgin Hotels Edinburgh (review here), he was in the US to cut the ribbon at another big opening party – and I was invited.

Virgin Hotels is still a relatively new brand. The first one only opened in Chicago in 2015, followed by San Francisco, Dallas, New Orleans, Nashville. In 2021, the 1,500+ room Hard Rock Las Vegas defected to Virgin Hotels and was rebranded, whilst confusingly also being part of Hilton’s Curio Collection.

Review Virgin Hotels New York City

The good news is that Virgin Hotels New York City is a new build and should provide an insight into everything Virgin hopes its hotel portfolio can be. This was not the case in Edinburgh, where they had to work around the confines of several existing historic buildings, although according to Rob’s review this was impressively done.

The hotel website is here.

Where is Virgin Hotels New York City?

On the corner of Broadway and 30th, the Virgin Hotels New York City is in the NoMad area. This is quickly developing as a hub for hotels, with The Ritz Carlton recently having opened and the Moxy Chelsea (review here) literally a block away.

Review Virgin Hotels New York City

Firmly in Midtown, this is a good spot to be in with Central Park and Greenwich Village almost equidistant. It is also just 10 blocks (around 15 minutes’ walk) to Hudson Yards and the start of the High Line, which takes you down to the Meatpacking District, the Whitney Museum of American Art and Thomas Heatherwick’s new Little Island pier.

By far the biggest impact on the location is the Empire State Building, which towers over the area just a few blocks away. Anyone in a room with a northerly aspect should get a good view of it, as I did from the 9th floor.

The closest subway stations are 28th Street and 33rd Street, whilst Grand Central Station is 12 blocks away (15-20 minutes on foot).

Inside Virgin Hotels New York City

This is a 39-storey corner build with 460 rooms (Virgin calls them ‘Chambers’ which to me sounds a bit mediaeval but is probably aimed at Americans!). There are no residences or commercial tenants – the whole building is taken up by Virgin, bar several units on the ground floor which will be leased out for retail and dining.

Despite this, the ground floor entrance is surprisingly small and dare I say it sparse. There is just a single space with minimal lobby seating and three reception desks:

Review Virgin Hotels New York City

and

Review Virgin Hotels New York City

The main social areas are on the third floor, where you can find the Everdene restaurant and bar serving breakfast lunch and dinner. There is a vast amount of outdoor terrace space here which is rare to find in New York City.

Review Virgin Hotels New York City

On the fourth floor is a small outdoor pool which will open shortly for the summer season:

Review Virgin Hotels New York City

…. plus a very trendy pool bar:

Review Virgin Hotels New York City

…. and, coming in due course, another Mediterranean themed restaurant.

On the fifth floor you have the gym:

Review Virgin Hotels New York City

The top two floors, on the 38th and 39th, are given over to event space and bars, with panoramic views of the skyline and a cosy outdoor terrace. In terms of event space Virgin Hotels is definitely one of the best options I’ve seen in New York, particularly as so much of it is outdoors.

Still to come is a spa, which will open at a later stage.

One thing I will add, and which appears to be a major teething problem at the hotel, are the lifts. There are six of them, which should be plenty, but they are surprisingly slow. They struggled during the opening party, with hundreds of guests moving between the 3rd and 38th floors. The hotel will have to rethink how it manages the lifts during these occasions to ensure that both hotel guests and those attending events can get where they need to go quickly and efficiently.

Rooms (or ‘Chambers’) at Virgin Hotels New York City

It’s easy to settle into the room once you get over the slightly odd nomenclature. There are just two room categories: Chamber Kings and Chamber Doubles, with those on the higher floors adding ‘Sky’ to their name. There are also a range of suites and a penthouse.

I had a Chamber King on the 9th floor, which was relatively low when you consider the number of floors in total.

All the rooms feature what Virgin Hotels is calling its ‘two chamber’ concept. That means you get a slightly larger corridor / atrium to your room. This is sort of a cross between the bathroom, walk-in wardrobe and dressing room, and is similar to what Rob found in Edinburgh:

Review Virgin Hotels New York City

and

Review Virgin Hotels New York City

A sliding door can block off the main bedroom, which is useful if you’re staying with friends or family.

Aware that red isn’t exactly a chill colour, Virgin Hotels has used it sparingly and generally as accents. For example, in the shower fittings:

Review Virgin Hotels New York City

Or even the red Smeg mini fridge, what appears to be a brand standard for Virgin Hotels:

Review Virgin Hotels New York City

There is a fully stocked minibar which was chargeable. Mugs were provided for tea and coffee, although I had neither a coffee machine or a kettle. Other people seemed to get Nespresso machines so they may just have missed my room – I’m pretty sure I was the first person to stay in it.

Review Virgin Hotels New York City

The bed is also the same as the one in the Edinburgh hotel, and features a built in sofa/work space with a marble table:

Review Virgin Hotels New York City

This was a nice touch, although it did feel like the bed was squeezed on both sides by being close to the window on one side and with a table on the other.

Review Virgin Hotels New York City

The night stand was a little crowded with a large landline phone, pad and pen, TV remote, alarm clock with funky ceiling projection function and what I believe is a wireless phone charger:

Review Virgin Hotels New York City

The corner of the bed has this unique back rest which is supposed to enable you to ‘work from bed’ but in reality this was more of a gimmick than anything else.

Review Virgin Hotels New York City

There are plenty of sockets around, including USB-A and USB-C connectivity, which was good to see.

When it comes to the view, well, you can’t argue with this:

Review Virgin Hotels New York City

I even enjoyed it sitting in bed:

Review Virgin Hotels New York City

Those on the South side of the building should be able to see the Freedom Tower.

Overall, I thought the rooms were stylish and clever in their use of space with hardwood flooring and a relatively neutral, warm colour scheme accentuated by the occasional red fitting. They were also relatively spacious – not huge, but bigger than your average hotel room in NYC.

Only two things stuck out to me: the plasticky toilet lid which felt cheap and the clunky blackout blinds which I can imagine breaking relatively quickly.

Breakfast at Virgin Hotels New York City

Don’t expect a big buffet here, because there isn’t one.

Breakfast isn’t included unless you book a breakfast-inclusive rate or are a Virgin Atlantic Flying Club Gold member. It is served in Everdene, the third floor bar-lounge-restaurant space which is nicely bright in the mornings:

Review Virgin Hotels New York City

In the summer, I’m sure it will be possible to sit outside which would be a novelty in NYC!

I tried the breakfast sandwich which is just what I needed after the opening party:

Review Virgin Hotels New York City

It isn’t cheap. An orange juice will set you back $12 before tax and tip whilst the food runs from $14 for some porridge to $30 for a bigger cooked breakfast.

A quick word on Virgin Hotels and hotel loyalty programmes

Before I round up, let me remind you about how Virgin Hotels fits – or doesn’t fit – into the existing Virgin Group loyalty schemes.

  • you can book all Virgin Hotels via Preferred Hotels, and earn and redeem points in iPrefer, except for Las Vegas
  • Virgin Hotels Las Vegas is actually a Hilton hotel (website here) and takes part in Hilton Honors as part of the Curio Collection brand – you can earn and spend Hilton Honors points there if you book via hilton.com
  • if you book direct at virginhotels.com, you can earn 2,000 Virgin Points per stay if you join the free The Know membership scheme – except for Edinburgh, which doesn’t earn points
  • Virgin Flying Club Gold and Silver members get extra benefits at Virgin Hotels if they book via virginhotels.comdetails on the Virgin Atlantic website here
  • you cannot redeem Virgin Points for Virgin Hotels (even though you can redeem iPrefer points and, for Las Vegas, Hilton Honors points) except for the current 35,000 points Edinburgh offer which covers limited dates. Virgin Points redemptions for the other hotels are due to launch later this year.

The company really needs to get a grip on this, especially the random blocking of the Edinburgh hotel from earning points and benefits via The Know.

Conclusion

Whilst clearly not a ‘normal’ stay with preparations for the opening party underway, I feel like I got a good sense of what the Virgin Hotel in New York City has to offer – and I liked it.

Comparing it to other brands, I think Virgin Hotels has done a good job in striking a good balance between Marriott’s W Hotels, which can sometimes be over the top and garish, with something more family friendly like a Moxy.

I do have some concerns that the broader market may be confused about what Virgin Hotels offers and who it is aimed at. It is closer to Virgin Atlantic than the ‘adults only’ Virgin Voyages in terms of approach but I do worry that potential guests might expect – or be put off by – a ‘W’ clone, which this really is not.

The rooms are smart and relaxing with a neutral colour palette with little nods to the Virgin Group brand. I was also impressed by how spacious the rooms were, as well as the ‘two chambers’ mini suite set up. The space is thoughtfully laid out, which makes a huge difference.

The only real feedback I have is that the lifts can be a bit of a pain and that the toilet seats feel a bit on the cheap side and don’t match the standard of the rest of the room. Apart from that, I’d be more than happy to return to Virgin Hotels New York City, particularly for its fantastic views and central location.

Rooms start at around $350 per night. You can find out more, and book, on the Virgin Hotels website here.

Looking for a hotel in New York?

We’ve reviewed a number of hotels in the Big Apple over the years. You can see our Manhattan hotel reviews here:

Elsewhere, we’ve reviewed:


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Comments (49)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Mike says:

    I guess I’m too old and grumpy to enjoy this hotel. They seem to want the party crowd.

    The $40 daily junk fee seems to have no benefits. I asked, was told I get nothing, then they claimed I could use the bars and restaurants! So nothing, it’s just adding $40 to the daily rate.

    Poor sound proofing, I could hear everything happening in the party going on in the room next to me till 4am. The Fridge is noisy, but you can unplug it at least. Nice to have a window that opens though. I don’t like the plug sockets in the seating area by the bed. Especially with USA plugs, that fall out so easily.

    Refused free breakfast with my Virgin Atlantic Gold status – “we don’t participate” I was told.

    I did get the 4000 points (there was a bonus opening offer). I got an email a few weeks after staying with a code to apply to my account. It’s not automatic.

    • Nick says:

      Thanks, that’s an interesting and useful perspective. Being stiffed with a crazy-expensive breakfast is frustrating, but the lack of sound-proofing is inexcusable.

    • Andrew says:

      Great real insight vs a press trip. With weekend rates often north of £500+ I’ll stay well away.

      Very poor.

  • Dev says:

    Is this another “licensed by Virgin” gimmick with Beardy being the PR figurehead and having a minority shareholding?

    • Rob says:

      They all work like that. Would be silly of him not to.

    • Chris W says:

      He’s in his 70s and he lives on a private island in the Caribbean. Do you think he will be involved in the day-to-day operations of this hotel?

  • Richie says:

    How wide is the bed?

  • TimM says:

    Multi-lift algorithms are a black art. The best use an evolutionary algorithm to constantly evolve according to the building and usage. The worst have hard-coded algorithms which are never optimal for any use-case. (It is my nerdish pleasure to reverse engineer the lift algorithm in every hotel I visit).

    • Bagoly says:

      Fascinating.
      Is there a possibility that regulations have reduced speed, or at least acceleration and deceleration (like the frustratingly slow door-closing in the EU) and architects have not realised the implications, or at least not convinced the bean counters of the implications?
      If there really aren’t enough (and having function rooms at the top is adding a lot of demand) it’s not as though one can add more.

    • Bagoly says:

      At the The Kimpton in Russell Square, and offices in Sao Paolo, I have come across the setup where the buttons for each floor are in the lobby, not inside the lift, and the system tells you which lift to take.
      Are these more efficient in terms of average/95% worst case waiting time/time to destination for user, and/or electricity usage?
      If so, typically by how much?
      I haven’t found anything on Google about this – perhaps I don’t know the key words.

      • The real Swiss Tony says:

        I’ve seen this in a small number of office buildings in London, too. I mean it makes sense especially at times of high volume, but for occasional users (such as myself) it just seems a bit confusing!

      • Mike says:

        They are using destination based lift controls, but the problem there is with a group of people, only one person selects a floor. 10 people get in, the lift thinks it’s quite empty so stops on a few more floors to fill it up.

      • TimM says:

        Choosing your destination floor before getting in the lift sounds way more sensible than just up or down buttons (which poorly-behaved people press both of). I can imagine having a conversation with the AI lift concierge along the lines of, “Which floor please? Why? Is it urgent? Would you like to tip for faster service?” 🙂

      • Thegasman says:

        They had this setup in Barnsley hospital in 2006 when I did a placement there as a medical student! Seemed to work very well & I couldn’t understand why they were so rare elsewhere until recently.

      • S says:

        It’s called https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Destination_dispatch

        Was introfuced to it recently at the Swissotel Chicago and it was very very efficient!

      • paul says:

        MSC cruises have destination buttons on newer ships. Excellent feature. Tell the ipaddy thing what floor you want and it tells you which of 6 lifts to stand by.

        If you’re stupid enough just to get in any lift then enjoy the ride lol

        On the older ships, they have an override slot for guests staying in Yacht Club cabins – pop your room card in, select your floor and it ignores everyone else’s choices. I only used it once though.

    • Panda Mick says:

      Fascinating fact about US Lifts: The “door close” button doesn’t do anything

      But whilst I’m not surprised more modern lifts have learning algorithm, thanks for sharing this. And kudos to the reverse engineering thing 🙂

    • Rob says:

      Correct. Smart ones, for eg, should in the mornings automatically return to the ground floor but in the evenings stay where they are.

    • Rhys says:

      They are, and in my experience they’re normally quite good. Not here, however…

  • Paul says:

    $12 for an orange juice?! Incredible.

    • Numpty says:

      plus tax and tip, add another 40%!

      When i was in NYC there was a local news feature on people not tipping 20% due to cost of living, one customer said that if you cant afford the 20% tip then dont eat out! Not sure if that’s what businesses actually want, but it shows the difference in views on tipping.

      • Rob says:

        I saw a salmon sandwich (in a deli fridge, wrapped in cling film) for $25 last year. This was Upper East Side though.

        That said, the Le Pain Quotidien in Central Park was asking $12.50 for a sandwich on Sat.

        4 buffet breakfasts at IC Boston cost us $180 inc tip last week. Wiped at check out as Diamond.

        • Lady London says:

          TBH That’s almost OK for Pain Quotidien. Usually it’s served nicely and often with bits.

          • Rob says:

            This was takeaway from a fridge!

          • Lady London says:

            Yeah, I don’t do takeaway from PQ much as then it’s mostly poor value. Certain PQ’s in London used to be my co-working space

        • Robert says:

          Is that Diamond Elite get free breakfasts in IHG? I’ve been missing out if that’s the case!

          • Rob says:

            Yes.

            Theoretically you need to tell them at check-in you want it as its in lieu of your 500-600 bonus points.

        • David says:

          Prices at Pret in NYC are not that much less. Vastly more expensive than London.

      • lyndon jones says:

        Guests should not have to top up the wages of staff.I tip 10-15%. Never had any waiters run after me in the street.

    • Mutley says:

      Unless brekkie is included I never go for hotels rip off prices. I found one of the few original diners in Manhattan on the corner of 2nd Avenue and 44th. Frequented by locals and staff from nearby United Nations, decent price, good scram

      • The Savage Squirrel says:

        This. Not even hard to find a decent and sensibly priced (for Manhattan anyway) diner within 5 minutes, anywhere in low/mid Manhattan. 30 second job on Google maps.

      • mvcvz says:

        The term is scran, you ridiculous poseur.

        • Mutley says:

          Apologies fat fingers m for n. No need for rudeness though😆😆😆😆😆

  • aseftel says:

    I know this isn’t specific to the hotel, but quite disheartening to see the $365 rate inflated to $462.49 after adding Javits tax, Amenity fee, City tax, sales tax and occupancy tax.

  • Phil G says:

    Could you hear the traffic and road noise in the room ?

    • Rhys says:

      Not with the AC on!

    • Rob says:

      In my experience the street noise is part of the ‘experience’, for better or worse. I was on the 25th floor of the Thompson Central Park over the weekend and even that high up it still sounds like the 2nd floor.

      • Phil G says:

        That’s why we always try to head to the Downtown Conrad when in NY. Trying the Hyatt House Jersey City next month – 2 metro stops from WTC and river facing so hopefully a quiet night.

  • Chris W says:

    Is that lip thing on the corner of the bed actually designed for you to sit on the bed, facing the headboard to work from? It looks both very uncomfortable and very impractical for that purpose – if you wanted to work from the bed, why not just sit against the pillows on the headboard?

    I thought it was purely a visual design feature.

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