Greenwich Hotel vs Gild Hall A Thompson Hotel
Both Gild Hall - A Thompson Hotel and Greenwich Hotel are praised by expert writers. Overall, Greenwich Hotel is the choice of most professionals compared to Gild Hall - A Thompson Hotel. Greenwich Hotel comes in at 97 with recommendations from 18 reviewers including Gayot, Zagat and DK Eyewitness.
Greenwich Hotel
Show All Reviews
377 Greenwich St., New York City, NY 10013
From $650 /night
- Pet Friendly
- Bar/Lounge
- Free Internet
- Room Service
- Laundry Service
- Concierge
Michelin Guide
"The tailored brick facade belies the treasures held within this hip hotel... The Greenwich really struts its stuff in the rooms."
Concierge
"A night at the Greenwich Hotel feels more like a stay at a cultured friend's city manse."
Fodor's
"Robert De Niro is an owner of the Greenwich Hotel in TriBeCa, De Niro's backyard and a neighborhood he's helped put on the map as a culinary and cultural benchmark."
Full review
Travel + Leisure
"The hotel’s most distinctive feature, however, may be the lofty level of craftsmanship... that ribbons throughout the public spaces."
Full review
DK Eyewitness
"Robert DeNiro and partners spared nothing in their luxurious eight-story hotel, which opened in 2008."
Gild Hall A Thompson Hotel
Show All Reviews
15 Gold Street, New York City, NY 10038
From $89 /night
- Pet Friendly
- Bar/Lounge
- Free Internet
- Room Service
- Laundry Service
- Concierge
Michelin Guide
"This place has serious chops as the sister property to hipper-than- thou 60 Thompson and its singular style is at once quirky and sophisticated."
Fodor's
"Captains of Industry, here's a boutique hotel for you... Gild Hall aggressively courts those clientele with a Y chromosome."
Full review
Oyster
Upscale
"Gild Hall is far hipper than your average Wall Street business hotel."
Full review
DK Eyewitness
"This luxury hotel boasts, among other features, a bi-level private library, an elegant champagne bar, a modern English tavern, and über-sleek guest rooms."
Time Out
"The lodgelike lobby reflects the group's luxury aesthetic with leather sofas, a faux antler chandelier and photographs by the late society lensman Slim Aarons."
Full review