Travel 3 minutes 04 October 2022

The Best Hotels of the Outer Boroughs

The dining, neighborhoods, and culture of Brooklyn and Queens are as rich and rewarding as anywhere in Manhattan.

Brooklyn and Queens are so entrenched as ideas, we forget that, as global tourist destinations, they’re still emerging markets. Sure, they’ve been iconic characters in American history since the Revolution, and especially throughout the 20th century, but it’s only been a decade or so since travelers desired not just to visit the outer boroughs, but to sleep in them too. That means the hotel stock isn’t quite as robust as, say, Midtown. That’ll take some time. But the dining, the neighborhoods, and the culture are as rich and rewarding as anywhere in Manhattan.

It’s the full outer-borough experience you’re after, here are a handful of our favorite hotels in Brooklyn, Queens, and beyond.

The Collective Paper Factory
Long Island City, Queens
The Collective Paper Factory is perhaps the purest example of New York industrial chic currently on offer in the boutique hotel world. In evidence are any number of historic touches, from original architectural features to reclaimed and salvaged flooring and furniture. The hotel is swaddled in textures of brick, stone, wood and leather, a far cry from the glossy sheen of today’s Manhattan boutique hotels.

The Collective Paper Factory
The Collective Paper Factory

The Rockaway Hotel
Rockaway Beach, Queens
New York City isn’t known for its beaches, but the Rockaways are the exception, and the Rockaway Hotel brings a bit of downtown style to this ocean-facing stretch of deep outer Queens. Designed by the same Morris Adjmi responsible for Brooklyn’s Wythe Hotel, it’s as hip as anything in town, and while summertime is when its beach-and-pool scene really shines, it’s relevant as a nearby getaway year-round.


The Rockaway Hotel
The Rockaway Hotel

Boro Hotel
Long Island City, Queens
Just across the East River from midtown Manhattan, on the border between Astoria and Long Island City, the Boro Hotel, to put it simply, is a stunner — architects Grzywinski+Pons, on fairly short notice, transformed an existing (but never used) structure into a boutique hotel that’s equal parts organic warmth and industrial cool, with some astonishing views and a generous helping of sunlight thrown in for good measure.

Boro Hotel
Boro Hotel

Wythe Hotel
Williamsburg, Brooklyn
While the Wythe may not have been the first boutique hotel in Williamsburg, it’s the one against which all future Brooklyn boutiques will be measured. Not because it won’t ever be topped, necessarily, but because it’s rare for a hotel to so completely exemplify the character of the neighborhood it calls home, with its location between McCarren Park and the gentrifying waterfront, in a 1901-vintage factory building that’s been lovingly renovated.

Wythe Hotel
Wythe Hotel

The Hoxton, Williamsburg
Williamsburg, Brooklyn
Shoreditch, the East London district that was home to the original Hoxton Hotel, became the hippest neighborhood in town right around the same time Williamsburg became New York’s own capital of cool. So it’s only fitting that the first Hoxton in the United States should set up shop here. The Hoxton, Williamsburg occupies a modern building, but it’s a loving tribute to the neighborhood’s industrial heritage.

The Hoxton, Williamsburg
The Hoxton, Williamsburg


Ace Hotel Brooklyn
Boerum Hill, Brooklyn
Leave it to Ace Hotels to find a way to put a novel spin on the idea of a Brooklyn boutique hotel. Ace Hotel Brooklyn finds itself not in Williamsburg but in rapidly evolving Boerum Hill, in an arresting new building by Stonehill Taylor. What’s familiar is what’s inside: modernist-inspired industrial-romantic interiors by Roman & Williams, who are on our short list for the world’s most influential boutique-hotel designers.

Ace Hotel Brooklyn
Ace Hotel Brooklyn

Box House Hotel
Greenpoint, Brooklyn
From the outside, Box House Hotel could easily be mistaken for another warehouse-turned-apartment-building in its Greenpoint neighborhood. The inside is just as true to form. The sunny, high-ceilinged rooms are fitted with large kitchenettes, dishware and all. The homey urban décor, from the big pull-out sofas to the warm modern lighting and hardwood floors, makes perfect sense for this converted door factory.

Box House Hotel
Box House Hotel

Henry Norman Hotel
Greenpoint, Brooklyn
Henry Norman Hotel is a modern boutique hotel with an old-school inspiration. It’s set in a 19th-century textile warehouse, and its studios, suites, and penthouses offer loft-style living complete with hardwood floors, exposed brick walls, and, in many cases, a terrace or even a roof deck. The décor is retro-inspired, as are some of the comforts — a vintage taxi is on hand for use as an in-house car service.

Henry Norman Hotel
Henry Norman Hotel

1 Hotel Brooklyn Bridge
DUMBO, Brooklyn
1 Hotel Brooklyn Bridge stands at the edge of Brooklyn Bridge Park, looking across the East River at the Lower Manhattan skyline, a view that’s unique among New York hotels. There’s no more fitting location for 1 Hotels’ eco-luxe aesthetic, with its salvaged materials, stylish design, and low-impact construction than here in Brooklyn, alongside the lush green park that’s been reclaimed from the city’s post-industrial waterfront.

1 Hotel Brooklyn Bridge
1 Hotel Brooklyn Bridge

Collective Governors Island
Governors Island, New York
Governors Island isn’t quite typical of New York neighborhoods; set between Brooklyn and the Statue of Liberty, a short water-taxi ride from lower Manhattan, it’s a car-free park that enjoys unparalleled views and an inimitable atmosphere. Collective’s tents and shelters offer a unique urban camp experience, accompanied by cooking classes, meditation and yoga sessions, live entertainment, and cocktails on the Sunset Terrace.

Collective Governors Island
Collective Governors Island

Graduate Roosevelt Island
Roosevelt Island, New York
Roosevelt Island is home to the Cornell Tech campus, a satellite of the Ithaca-based university. The Graduate is the island’s only hotel, and in typical Graduate style it’s dedicated to the campus that it serves — this being New York, the hotel is forward-looking and urban in style, with architecture and design by Snøhetta. Now, we know that Roosevelt Island is technically part of Manhattan. But only technically. It’s far enough removed to make this list.

Graduate Roosevelt Island
Graduate Roosevelt Island


Hero image: Boro Hotel

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