Feature: Go Travel: Tips, Trips and Traps

Are Ace Hotels The Coolest Hotels In America?

Author: Kaleel Sakakeeny
Published: September 20, 2010 at 8:33 am
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Probably.

And that would make Ace Hotel founder Alex Calderwood one of the hippest guys in America.

If Chris Mahoney, Senior VP at BlackBook Media  is right, the recession killed the big, expensive hotel model, and “Calderwood has filled a niche.”

BlackBook publishes popular on- and offline content on hotels, restaurants and nightlife.

But Calderwood, according to a recent interview in Entrepreneur Magazine didn’t just create a string of unique hotels. He created a “lifestyle brand” that also just happens to be unique places to sleep and stay.

In fact, he created four of them: Portland, Seattle, New York and Palm Springs. And each one is so original, off-beat, and creative that staying there is its own destination, its own experience with all attendant bragging rights!

Entrepreneur Magazine, in describing the Seattle Ace (the chain’s first hotel), said it was like no place one has ever stayed in before.

The Glass doors and narrow corridors apparently resemble a modern art installation, and the 28 uniquely designed rooms set the standard for an “individualistic driven” space, including a shower curtain made of red, recycled welding material, platform beds, revolving doors, exposed bricks and pipes and a copy of the Kama Sutra... next to the Bible. The open flights of stairs lead to Seattle’s energized downtown.

The Ace Hotel in New York (20 W. 29th Street) is a 12-story gem in the heart of Manhattan. Having seen the hotel bathed in glowing press reports from magazines like Vogue, we wondered what the guests thought.

In Trip Advisor and Yelp, the reviews all highlighted the “funkiness” of the place, singling out the terrific coffee, crazy bunk beds, small showers, small rooms, and an overall “with it,” fun, quirky  atmosphere.

Calderwood had a lot of cool going for him before the hotels. He’s the co-founder of Rudy’s Barbershop chain and the marketing agency Neverstop. But Calderwood is on a mission with his hotels, all moderately priced. He says he wants to create “a sense of place, a culture” in whatever city he’s in.

He’s done that, and more.  Check the website if you can't stay at a hotel.

He actually put turntables and records in the Portland hotel rooms.

Why? “Why not?” he asks.

 
 

About this article

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Article Author: Kaleel Sakakeeny

Kaleel Sakakeeny is the CEO of New Media Travel (NMT) producing Travel Video PostCards, one-minute, sound rich travel videos; timely blogs on travel trends, tips and trips, and Audio PostCards. NMT provides relevant travel news and information for consumers and the travel industry. …

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