Closed for 2020
This luxury hotel is a member of the Small Luxury Hotels of the World network and a destination in itself. The 120-year-old landmark, also a member of the National Trust Historic Hotels of America, offers extraordinary views of the Hudson River. Most of the Luxury Suites feature antiques, fireplaces, and four-poster beds. An additional wing includes 24 Junior Suites, Deluxe King, and Deluxe Queen rooms at more moderate prices. The facility boasts an outdoor heated swimming pool (open seasonally) with a mile-long trail wrapping around the breathtaking property .The award-winning New American restaurant Equus offers three distinctly elegant rooms. The newly opened THANN Sanctuary Spa, the first of its kind in the US, offers a wide variety of natural therapy treatments in an incomparable, peaceful setting with stunning design, full facilities, and a 24-hour gym. When you reserve, please ask for special heritage tour packages that include visits to area historic sites such as Kykuit, the Rockefeller Estate, seasonal festivals, and activities on offer from Historic Hudson Valley.
Japanese cuisine served at hibachi tables, in tatami rooms or at a sushi bar.
Casual restaurant serving Caribbean and Latin American fare.
Located in the cellar of historic Biddle House Mansion on the grounds of Tarrytown House Estate, this small tavern and wine cellar features modern twists on American fare.
Cantonese cuisine meets modern twists and local ingredients.
Authentic Peruvian cuisine.
A family-owned Greek restaurant rated “very good” by the New York Times.
Authentic Dominican cuisine.
156 guest rooms. Complimentary continental breakfast with self-serve waffle station. Free high speed internet, fitness center, and pool.
New York-style pizza and Italian pasta dishes.
An informal Irish pub and restaurant on Beekman Avenue.
Latin American cuisine in the center of Sleepy Hollow.
Restaurant with a New England feel on the Hudson waterfront serving seasonal specialties from their northern farm.
Classic bar food and a choice of 20 craft beers and 4 wines on tap.
Lyndhurst, a historic site of the National Trust, is one of the great domestic landmarks of America. A visit to the house and its 67-acre park is a must for all who are interested in 19th-century architecture, decorative arts, and landscape design.
Lyndhurst is adjacent to Washington Irving’s Sunnyside. There are historic and aesthetic connections of interest between the sites, but it is the ability to walk from site to site that has the most special appeal. Visitors may walk the publicly maintained Croton Aqueduct Trail from Lyndhurst to West Sunnyside Lane.
Lyndhurst was designed by Alexander Jackson Davis (1803-1892) in the gothic revival style. Davis completed this first phase in 1842, and designed much of the furniture. In 1864, Lyndhurst’s owner hired Davis to more than double its size.
In 1880 Jay Gould (1836-1892), the railroad magnate, Wall Street tycoon, and prototypical robber baron, purchased the estate and renamed it Lyndhurst. He added a colossal greenhouse in the gothic style by the firm of Lord and Burnham; its cast-iron structure still stands. Gould hired Herter Brothers to redecorate and added paintings by Corot, Courbet, Bouguereau, and others, many still extant.
The important “gardenesque” landscape is by Ferdinand Mangold (1828-1905). Many of the landscape features created by Mangold, his predecessors, and his successors, are preserved, including spectacular specimen trees.
American classics with a Parisian twist.
Amenities include fully equipped kitchen, on-premise laundry, and free grab-and-go breakfast.
Family-owned pizzeria and restaurant.
Seafood-centric restaurant with rooftop views of the Hudson River.
A wide selection of draft beer, house-smoked barbecue, and a variety of salads, seafood, and other American cuisine. View of the Tappan Zee and the Hudson.
Enter the year 1750, when Philipsburg Manor was a thriving milling and trading complex that was home to 23 enslaved individuals of African descent.