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Fifth Avenue Hotel

Fifth Avenue Hotel
FifthAvenueHotel1860 framecrop.jpg
(1860)
General information
Address 200 Fifth Avenue
Construction started 1856
Completed 1859
Inaugurated 23 August 1859
Demolished 1908
Owner Amos R. Eno
Design and construction
Architect Griffith Thomas with William Washburn

Coordinates: 40°44′31″N 73°59′22″W / 40.74205°N 73.98945°W / 40.74205; -73.98945

The Fifth Avenue Hotel was a luxury hotel located at 200 Fifth Avenue in Manhattan, New York City from 1859 to 1908. It occupied the full Fifth Avenue frontage between 23rd Street and 24th Street, at the southwest corner of Madison Square.

The site that would become the Fifth Avenue Hotel was once the location of "Madison Cottage", a frame structure with an eighteenth-century core that had served as a stagecoach stop for passengers headed north from the city. From 1853 to 1856 it was replaced by Franconi's Hippodrome, a tent-like structure of canvas and wood which could accommodate up to 10,000 spectators who watched chariot races and other "Amusesments of the Ancient Greeks and Romans". It was this structure that was torn down to make way for the hotel.

The Fifth Avenue Hotel was built in 1856–59 by Amos Richards Eno at the cost of $2 million, was designed by Griffith Thomas with William Washburn. At the time of its construction it stood so far uptown from the centers of city life it was dubbed "Eno's Folly"; New York bankers refused to capitalize the project, and Eno turned to Boston for funding.

The hotel, which quickly developed a reputation as New York's most elegant, became "the social, cultural political hub of elite New York," and brought in a quarter of a million dollars a year in profits. It spurred development of additional hotels to the north and west, in the neighborhood known now as NoMad ("North of Madison Square Park").


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