Pros

  • 10-minute walk from most Broadway theaters, and easy access to West Side Highway
  • Clean, large rooms, especially for the price
  • Indoor pool -- rare for a New York hotel
  • On-site Tex-Mex restaurant and bar
  • Cheap valet parking
  • Close to 9th Avenue's up-and-coming restaurant and bar scene
  • Small but modern fitness center
See More Pros

Cons

  • Somewhat neighborhood may bother some
  • No restaurant on-site
  • Closest subway is five to 10 minutes away by foot
  • Fee for Wi-Fi
  • No in-and-out privileges with the parking
  • Exterior has a motel look and feel
See More Cons

Bottom Line

The Skyline eschews style and charm in favor of large rooms and a swimming pool, both of which are tough to come by in New York, especially at this price point. Some might be put off by the low-key, though safe neighborhood, but it's a good value near Broadway, and a great one if you're driving -- parking is a fraction of what you'd pay at other Manhattan hotels. Though there's a fee for Wi-Fi, the on-site restaurant and fitness center add to its value.

See More Bottom Line

Amenities

  • Cribs
  • Fitness Center
  • Internet
  • Pets Allowed
  • Pool

Oyster Hotel Review

Skyline Hotel

Scene

A modest but comfortable mid-size, mid-priced hotel in Hell's Kitchen

The Skyline is New York's version of the strong, silent type: It has a gruff exterior, but if you delve deeper and give it a chance, you'll find simplicity and quality. From the outside, it doesn't look like much. It's two blocks off the West Side Highway, alone on the corner of a relatively quiet street in an area known as Hell's Kitchen -- one of the last neighborhoods in Manhattan that could still be called up-and-coming. The building itself resembles a motel, right down to the above-ground parking lot next to the entrance. Even the font on the sign looks like it was pulled straight from an interstate motor lodge in Nevada.

It's not until you step into the lobby that you breathe a sigh of relief and realize the Skyline is a hotel, and a decent one too. On the inside, the Skyline looks pretty much like many of its more expensive (but still mid-priced) counterparts east of 10th Avenue. The marble floors in the lobby glimmer. There's a bell staff and a concierge. Throw in the El Original restaurant and bar, a pool, and 231 rooms that often go for less than $200 a night, and the Skyline legitimately enters the conversation with midtown's myriad other mid-range hotels.

The Skyline has been owned by the same people since 1982. Those folks also own the Excelsior, on the Upper West Side, and if you can find a room there for roughly the same price, and don't need to be near Broadway or Times Square, go for it: the Excelsior is far more charming. But the Skyline is a good value in its own right, especially if theater is high on your NYC to-do list, and especially if you're driving into the city -- parking is a fraction of what you'd pay at most New York hotels.

See More Scene

Location

Hell's Kitchen, a slightly gritty but up-and-coming neighborhood in Midtown West

The Skyline is one of the only hotels in Manhattan's Clinton neighborhood, better known as Hell's Kitchen, which was famous for its organized crime and gang warfare until the 1990s, when the area -- like so many in Manhattan -- began to gentrify. (Midtown's dense colony of hotels begins two blocks over, on 8th Avenue.) It's relatively quiet at night by New York standards, which may make some visitors uneasy, and the immediate area is still a bit gritty, but it's worth emphasizing that it is now generally quite safe. And the street just one block east, 9th Avenue, has become one of the hippest, most hopping stretches in the city: restaurants, bars, coffee shops, bodegas, and pizza joints galore. A few more blocks east and you're in Times Square.

  • Not ideal for subway access. Closest stop is two long blocks away (a five- to 10-minute walk).
  • 10-minute walk from most Broadway theaters
  • Half a mile from Central Park ($5 to $8 taxi)
  • Military and aeronautics aficionados will want to check out the Intrepid Air Space Museum, housed aboard a WW2-era aircraft carrier, just two blocks west, on the 46th Street pier.
See More Location

Rooms

Rooms are spacious and open to your furry friends

  • Rooms start at 400 square feet, which is double the size of an average mid-range hotel room.
  • Mini-fridges
  • Flat-panel TV with cable and movies on demand
  • Fee for Wi-Fi
  • Earth-tone decor
  • Pet-friendly, for refundable deposit and two pet limit
  • Cali toiletries
See More Rooms

Features

Indoor pool, fitness center, and meeting spaces

Not many hotels in New York have a pool, so it's a welcome surprise that the Skyline does. It's an indoor saltwater pool surrounded by loungers and floor-to-ceiling windows. There's also a small gym with a handful of cardio and strength training machines and free weights. The hotel has two ballrooms to accommodate 75-260 people. 

In the bottom level of the hotel is the on-site restaurant and bar, El Original. They serve Tex-Mex favorites like queso, enchiladas, and margaritas. It's open for all three meals. 

See More Features

Things You Should Know About Skyline Hotel

Also Known As

  • Skyline Hotel New York
  • Skyline New York City
  • Skyline Hotel New York City
  • Skyline New York

Room Types

  • Deluxe Queen Room
  • Executive King Room
  • Junior Suite
  • Junior Suite- 2 Queen Beds
  • Superior Room
  • Twin Room

Address

725 10th Avenue, At 49th Street, New York City, New York 10019-7199, United States

Phone

(212) 586-3400

Website

Oyster Hotel Review

Skyline Hotel

Scene

A modest but comfortable mid-size, mid-priced hotel in Hell's Kitchen

The Skyline is New York's version of the strong, silent type: It has a gruff exterior, but if you delve deeper and give it a chance, you'll find simplicity and quality. From the outside, it doesn't look like much. It's two blocks off the West Side Highway, alone on the corner of a relatively quiet street in an area known as Hell's Kitchen -- one of the last neighborhoods in Manhattan that could still be called up-and-coming. The building itself resembles a motel, right down to the above-ground parking lot next to the entrance. Even the font on the sign looks like it was pulled straight from an interstate motor lodge in Nevada.

It's not until you step into the lobby that you breathe a sigh of relief and realize the Skyline is a hotel, and a decent one too. On the inside, the Skyline looks pretty much like many of its more expensive (but still mid-priced) counterparts east of 10th Avenue. The marble floors in the lobby glimmer. There's a bell staff and a concierge. Throw in the El Original restaurant and bar, a pool, and 231 rooms that often go for less than $200 a night, and the Skyline legitimately enters the conversation with midtown's myriad other mid-range hotels.

The Skyline has been owned by the same people since 1982. Those folks also own the Excelsior, on the Upper West Side, and if you can find a room there for roughly the same price, and don't need to be near Broadway or Times Square, go for it: the Excelsior is far more charming. But the Skyline is a good value in its own right, especially if theater is high on your NYC to-do list, and especially if you're driving into the city -- parking is a fraction of what you'd pay at most New York hotels.

See More Scene

Location

Hell's Kitchen, a slightly gritty but up-and-coming neighborhood in Midtown West

The Skyline is one of the only hotels in Manhattan's Clinton neighborhood, better known as Hell's Kitchen, which was famous for its organized crime and gang warfare until the 1990s, when the area -- like so many in Manhattan -- began to gentrify. (Midtown's dense colony of hotels begins two blocks over, on 8th Avenue.) It's relatively quiet at night by New York standards, which may make some visitors uneasy, and the immediate area is still a bit gritty, but it's worth emphasizing that it is now generally quite safe. And the street just one block east, 9th Avenue, has become one of the hippest, most hopping stretches in the city: restaurants, bars, coffee shops, bodegas, and pizza joints galore. A few more blocks east and you're in Times Square.

  • Not ideal for subway access. Closest stop is two long blocks away (a five- to 10-minute walk).
  • 10-minute walk from most Broadway theaters
  • Half a mile from Central Park ($5 to $8 taxi)
  • Military and aeronautics aficionados will want to check out the Intrepid Air Space Museum, housed aboard a WW2-era aircraft carrier, just two blocks west, on the 46th Street pier.
See More Location

Rooms

Rooms are spacious and open to your furry friends

  • Rooms start at 400 square feet, which is double the size of an average mid-range hotel room.
  • Mini-fridges
  • Flat-panel TV with cable and movies on demand
  • Fee for Wi-Fi
  • Earth-tone decor
  • Pet-friendly, for refundable deposit and two pet limit
  • Cali toiletries
See More Rooms

Features

Indoor pool, fitness center, and meeting spaces

Not many hotels in New York have a pool, so it's a welcome surprise that the Skyline does. It's an indoor saltwater pool surrounded by loungers and floor-to-ceiling windows. There's also a small gym with a handful of cardio and strength training machines and free weights. The hotel has two ballrooms to accommodate 75-260 people. 

In the bottom level of the hotel is the on-site restaurant and bar, El Original. They serve Tex-Mex favorites like queso, enchiladas, and margaritas. It's open for all three meals. 

See More Features

Best Rates

Amenities

  • Air Conditioner

  • Airport Transportation

  • Business Center

  • Cable

  • Concierge

  • Cribs

  • Dry Cleaning

  • Fitness Center

  • Internet

  • Kids Allowed

  • Laundry

  • Meeting / Conference Rooms

  • Pets Allowed

  • Pool

  • Room Service

  • Separate Bedroom / Living Room Space

  • Tennis Court

Disclaimer: This content was accurate at the time the hotel was reviewed. Please check our partner sites when booking to verify that details are still correct.