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Chelsea Hotel

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Chelsea Hotel Overview

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photo by SSchultz
Longtime bohemian hangout and stomping ground, the Chelsea Hotel hangs in a magical state of romantic disrepair, both glamorous and decadent--just like its residents. Built in 1884 as an apartment complex, the Hotel is now one of the premier literary landmarks in all New York and has been carefully (that is, minimally) restored with an eye towards maintaining its alluring literary and artistic mystique. Cantankerous Mark Twain and the hermetic O. Henry lived and worked here in the early twentieth century, when the building was a glamorous long-term residence hotel, and modernist giant Thomas Wolfe set up shop here while working on his masterpiece You Can't Go Home Again in the thirties. In mid-century, James Farrell, Dylan Thomas, and Arthur Miller all settled in to channel the Chelsea muse--which also drew Andy Warhol here, for the making of his movie The Chelsea Girls. The building itself is a schizophrenic assemblage of various European architectural styles, a twelve-story brick block fitted with ornate iron balconies equal parts Bourbon Street, Bloomsbury, and le Marais. Inside, the walls are dingy, the furniture aging, and the light low--but that's all the better to settle in with a sophisticated cocktail.
By: Cyrus Submitted: 08/08/2007 Comments on this fact? Tell the TravelGoat editors.
Sir Arthur C. Clarke wrote 2001: A Space Odyssey while staying at the Chelsea Hotel.
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By: F. Hot Fitzgerald Submitted: 04/23/2007 Comments on this fact? Tell the TravelGoat editors.
The hotel’s room number 100 was the location where Nancy Spungeon, the girlfriend of Sex Pistols bassist Sid Vicious, was found stabbed to death in the bathtub on October 11, 1978.
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By: ad103 Submitted: 04/23/2007 Comments on this fact? Tell the TravelGoat editors.
The building that currently houses the Chelsea Hotel was the tallest building in New York from 1884 until 1902.
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