Library Hotel by Library Hotel Collection

Guest-guided hotel insights

Library Hotel by Library Hotel Collection

New York · US

Review

This hotel has little guest-verified firsthand data yet. 0 reports; thin data, conclusions stay cautious. High-value questions (upgrades, lounge, breakfast) stay marked insufficient — we label thin data, we never fabricate.

Contribute a stay report

Not enough firsthand data on member benefits

0 firsthand reports so far — not enough to split benefits by tier. Whether upgrades, lounge, or breakfast actually deliver remains unverified.

Be the first · add a report

Rooms & Views

Junior Suite with One King Bed
1x Super King 33 Up to 2

This suite features a sofa bed, flat-screen TV, and a mini-bar. Please note, the king bed is 76” x 80”. The room is 350…

Deluxe Room with One King Bed
1x Super King 26 Up to 2

This deluxe room has 1 king bed and offers views of the Madison Avenue and 41st Street.

Queen Room - Disability Access
1x Queen 26 Up to 2
City view

Offering free toiletries and bathrobes, this double room includes a private bathroom with a walk-in shower, a hairdryer…

Deluxe Room with One Queen Bed
1x Queen 23 Up to 2

This room features a flat-screen TV, a mini-bar, and work desk. Please note, the queen bed is 60” x 80”. The room is 25…

Petite Room with One Full Bed
1x Double 19 Up to 2

This room features a flat-screen TV, a mini-bar, and work desk. Please note, the double bed is 54” x 75”. This room 200…

T2 · Official booking system. Actual features may vary.

Restaurants nearby

  • Sushi Sho★★★ Michelin In the shadow of the New York Public Library, Chef Keiji Nakazawa exemplifies mastery of the highest order. His omakase is utterly unique. The progression ebbs and flows with a dazzling variety of fish, shellfish, vegetables and more; applying an extensive use of fermentation techniques first developed in Japan. Reverent, while also honoring flexibility and evolution, the chef and team are constantly honing their craft.The setting is its own marvel and features a Hinoki counter flanked by towering ice boxes fronted with carved wood doors, while all around, the kitchen and service teams work in122m
  • Gabriel Kreuther★★ Michelin At the base of the Grace building on the edge of Bryant Park, this cavernous restaurant is dressed in luxury from top to bottom. A large bar welcomes a boisterous after-work crowd, while the spacious dining room is a work of cream-colored banquettes, fine art and sparkling cutlery. Alsatian-born Chef Gabriel Kreuther cooks with a global sensibility rooted in excellent French technique. Warm kugelhopf with chive fromage blanc as well as the smoked sturgeon and sauerkraut tart are indulgent, gratifying classics, while bass with wax bean ragout and mussels celebrates the seasons. An old-school ch292m
  • Le Pavillon★ Michelin It may have a classic-sounding name, but Le Pavillon resides in one of the city's newest skyscrapers. The elegant dining room, with its soaring ceilings, plate glass and warm palette, makes the well-heeled feel right at home. You'll rub shoulders with many at the bar, a prized perch crowned by a dramatic blown glass chandelier. Chef Daniel Boulud and co-executive chef Will Nacev skillfully prepare a contemporary, globally inflected carte dominated by seafood and vegetable-focused items. Spaghetti alla chitarra may be twirled with Meyer lemon butter sauce and crowned with Kaluga caviar; while v111m
  • Jōji★ Michelin Hidden away in a corner of Grand Central, at the base of the ritzy One Vanderbilt building, Jōji presents a disarming oasis of calm and sophistication amidst the hustle and bustle. The meal begins with small plates that blend Japanese flavors with seasonal elements, as in a sashimi of buri with green apple, ginger, and yuzu zest, followed by nigiri featuring a blend of Koshihikari and Nanatsuboshi rice, carefully vinegared to showcase the flavor of the fish. The variety of excellent seafood, largely sourced from Toyosu Market, is impressive, and even devoted sybarites will leave satisfied. Exp164m
  • Joo Ok★★ Michelin In the beating heart of Koreatown, take a freight elevator up 16 stories to find this elegantly appointed retreat. Echoing a traditional Korean home, guests are welcomed with snacks and drinks before being escorted to the dining room, where a minimalist design is juxtaposed with views of the Manhattan skyline. Chef Chang-ho Shin offers a Korean tasting menu that feels both traditional and contemporary and exudes calm, collected refinement. A deconstructed pheasant mandu with foie gras and morels is a remarkable feat while spotted prawn and geoduck clam is dressed with vivid green perilla oil m791m
  • Le Bernardin★★★ MichelinWorld's 50 Best #13La Liste 99.5 Well-heeled patrons continue to hold court in this iconic Midtown restaurant led by the ever-gracious Chef Eric Ripert. Truly, this is the moment to dress up, as diamond necklaces and finely pressed suits fill the kinetic dining room night after night. Seafood has long been the calling card of a kitchen that offers a sizeable à la carte menu and doesn’t force guests into lengthy tasting experiences. Salmon with horseradish emulsion alongside the signature yellowfin tuna pounded thin and laid over toasted baguette smeared with foie gras speaks to a quietly sophisticated, confident style ground 1.1km
  • Atomix★★ MichelinWorld's 50 Best #6 Chef Junghyun Park and his wife Ellia are global ambassadors for contemporary Korean cooking, but all roads lead back to their Murray Hill brownstone. Sporting dark finishes and soothing earth tones, the room unfolds into a chic bar and subterranean dining counter that is as warm and as inviting as the servers. This is one of the city’s most coveted reservations – and for good reason. Black banana is topped with monkfish liver, puffed buckwheat and perilla leaves, while langoustine from Norway is grilled, then set over truffle gel and honey nut squash foam. The menu is ever evolving, but the t912m
  • Tempura Matsui★ Michelin Tempura Matsui skillfully demonstrates why tempura is a celebrated Japanese cuisine type in its own right. The prized seats are at the counter, especially if you want to see the master at work.The chef uses a mix of sesame and cottonseed oils and the batter is used sparingly. You’ll start with a seasonal soup including seared scallop with wheat cake, before having some beautifully arranged sashimi. Then, the main event begins in the traditional way with crispy shrimp legs. Dishes turned out of this kitchen usually vary according to the seasons, but could include the likes of wonderfully tender601m
  • Eleven Madison Park★★★ Michelin Chef Daniel Humm presides over this temple of modern elegance with a zealous dedication to masterful precision. Nothing is out of place and everything is custom made, from the staff’s suits to the handblown water vases. The menu’s plant-based creations are a bold vision of luxury dining and elevates the concept to unparalleled heights. The freshly baked, delicately crisped vegan roll presented with faux butter is a magical creation. A quenelle of tonburi, mimicking caviar, plated with horseradish cream and accompanied by a radish tostada with a swipe of pumpkin seed butter is simply stunning. 1.3km
  • Aquavit★★ Michelin Aquavit remains one of the city’s most polished expressions of contemporary Scandinavian cooking, set within a sleek dining room anchored by a striking open kitchen under Chef Emma Bengtsson. The tasting menus lean heavily into Nordic sensibilities, balancing pristine seafood, preserved elements, cultured dairy and bright seasonal produce with elegant restraint. Dishes may include beautifully cooked Norwegian langoustine with Meyer lemon sabayon and crisp shellfish tuile, or halibut paired with salt-baked celeriac and smoked whey beurre blanc. Desserts continue the restaurant’s refined style, 1.1km

Includes Michelin / Black Pearl / guide picks (reference quality, no prices); data from Overture, Michelin Guide and others.

Attractions nearby

  • Empire State Building skyscraper located in Midtown Manhattan, New York City, USA656m
  • Grand Central Terminal railway terminal in New York City211m
  • Times Square neighborhood and square in Manhattan, New York City, United States799m
  • Museum of Modern Art art museum in Manhattan in New York City, New York, United States1.1km
  • Rockefeller Center mixed-use building complex in New York City, New York, USA724m
  • St. Patrick's Cathedral cathedral of the Catholic Archdiocese of New York771m
  • Radio City Music Hall concert hall and music venue in New York City, United States847m
  • Madison Square and Madison Square Park square and park in Manhattan, New York City1.3km

Attraction data from Wikidata (CC0) — reference only.

This page carries no prices or booking. Guest content and money are separated by design — this page never holds a price, commission, or booking rank.
Book on FlyerTrip →

Related community discussion

Start a discussion

Community posts are member discussion. They are not used as verified records until separately reviewed.

No related posts yet

Start the first public discussion for this hotel or its program.

Want to know?

Ask about Library Hotel by Library Hotel Collection's benefits, facilities or check-in — guests who stayed will answer.
External scores · reference only, not verified

External signal · aggregated platform reviews

External, unverified · reference only; benefit conclusions defer to firsthand

9.21/10FlyerKey composite · 724 aggregated reviews · not treated as a verified score · 2 sources

External aggregates never count as verified, and this page never shows a price.