The Roosevelt Hotel

New York City, New York

The Roosevelt Hotel About the Resort

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One step through the doors and The Roosevelt Hotel's magnificent ambience transports guests back to the classic setting of New York City in the Roaring Twenties. Renowned as the "Grand Dame of Madison Avenue," the hotel opened in 1924 and has been meticulously restored to its original grandeur.

Spanning over a full city block on Madison Avenue across from Grand Central Station, the hotel provides guests with easy walking access to Broadway, Rockefeller Center and famous Fifth Avenue shopping. Named in honor of President Theodore Roosevelt, this midtown landmark was once linked to Grand Central Station by way of an underground passage.

Guy Lombardo performed "Auld Lang Syne" for the first time in the hotel's Roosevelt Grill and Lawrence Welk began his impressive career here.

The Roosevelt Hotel has appeared in several major motion pictures, including The Boiler Room, Wall Street, Quiz Show, Presumed Innocent, Malcolm X, Monday Night Mayhem, The French Connection, Maid in Manhattan, The Hoax and 1408.

Originally opened in 1924, the hotel closed in 1995 and reopened in 1997 following an extensive $65-million renovation. There is a total of 1,015 guest rooms, including 52 suites.