SIXTY LES Review: What To REALLY Expect If You Stay (2024)

Table of Contents
Pros Cons Bottom Line Hotel & Amenities Photos Amenities Oyster Awards Oyster Hotel Review Scene With its austere design, hip downtown Manhattan location, and plush amenities like a swimming pool, the SIXTY LES is a quintessential boho-chic luxury hotel. Location Manhattan's Lower East Side has for the most part up and came, but it's still a little rough around the edges. Great restaurants and nightlife. Airport 30 to 90 minutes from three airports. Rooms Large, fun, sleek faux-industrial designs; great views through floor-to-ceiling windows; comfortable beds; and up-to-date electronics. Features An extremely rare (but small) pool; a decent fitness center; an in-house spa; two bars; and a restaurant All-Inclusive / Food The hotel offers on-site dining at Blue Ribbon Sushi Izakaya, and drinks atBlue Ribbon Beer Garden Related Hotels This Hotel Also Featured In Things You Should Know About SIXTY LES Oyster Hotel Review Scene With its austere design, hip downtown Manhattan location, and plush amenities like a swimming pool, the SIXTY LES is a quintessential boho-chic luxury hotel. Location Manhattan's Lower East Side has for the most part up and came, but it's still a little rough around the edges. Great restaurants and nightlife. Airport 30 to 90 minutes from three airports. Rooms Large, fun, sleek faux-industrial designs; great views through floor-to-ceiling windows; comfortable beds; and up-to-date electronics. Features An extremely rare (but small) pool; a decent fitness center; an in-house spa; two bars; and a restaurant All-Inclusive / Food The hotel offers on-site dining at Blue Ribbon Sushi Izakaya, and drinks atBlue Ribbon Beer Garden Amenities Air Conditioner Balcony / Terrace / Patio Cable Concierge Cribs Dry Cleaning Fitness Center Full Kitchen Internet Kids Allowed Laundry Meeting / Conference Rooms Mini Bar (with liquor) Pool Room Service Separate Bedroom / Living Room Space Smoking Rooms Available References

Pros

  • Sleek rooms with flat-screen TVs and an iPod docking station
  • Chic design throughout the hotel
  • Popular Blue Ribbon Sushi Izakaya on site
  • Walking distance to great restaurants and bars
  • Attentive staff works to impress
  • Pool, sauna, and fitness center
  • Free basic Wi-Fi

See MorePros

Cons

  • Far from uptown activities like Central Park
  • Complaints of noise
  • Some furnishings are worn

See MoreCons

Bottom Line

This gorgeous 141-room boutique joined other high-end hotels and restaurants to help revitalized the once-gritty Lower East Side neighborhood, which is known for its raucous late-night activity. For well-heeled hipsters looking for downtown action, the cool design, attentive staff, fitness center, and pool combine to make this a very fine place to crash after a night out.

See MoreBottom Line

Hotel & Amenities Photos

The Hotel
King Deluxe Room
Double Deluxe Room
Amenities
Penthouse
Restaurants and Bars
King Studio
Superior Queen Room

Amenities

  • Cribs
  • Fitness Center
  • Internet
  • Pool

See More Amenities

Oyster Awards

  • Best Luxury Hotels in the Lower East Side, NYC
  • Best Boutique Hotels in the Lower East Side, NYC
  • Best Boutique Hotels in New York City
  • Best Party Hotels in New York City
  • Best Hotel Room Service in New York City

Oyster Hotel Review

SIXTY LES

Hotel Class:Upscale

Scene

With its austere design, hip downtown Manhattan location, and plush amenities like a swimming pool, the SIXTY LES is a quintessential boho-chic luxury hotel.

SIXTY LES Review: What To REALLY Expect If You Stay (9)

Industrialchic? For sure. This is the Lower East Side, after all, once a tenement-filled haven for freshly arrived immigrants that, in recent years, has been transformed into a fashionable boutique-, restaurant-, and bar-filled haven for young urban professionals who like a little grit in their neighborhood. And the hotel, with its austere and rough-hewn yet distinctly luxurious design, fits in well -- even if the neighborhood seems like a surprising place for a luxury hotel.

Sure, there's a lot of pretension on display here. But the place also delivers: The staff is casual yet professional; the hotel really is beautiful (at least on the inside); the rooms are well-equipped with electronics and luxury comforts; and the lobby and bars draw a scene.

For all that you get at the SIXTY LES, room rates compare favorably to other downtown luxury boutiques, though it's worth also checking out sister property SIXTY SoHo, the company's SoHo flagship, as well as the Bowery Hotel, located a few blocks west and north.

See MoreScene

Location

Manhattan's Lower East Side has for the most part up and came, but it's still a little rough around the edges. Great restaurants and nightlife.

For most of the past century, the Lower East Side was the neighborhood where newly arrived immigrants packed into tenements while trying to grab a toehold here in America. Now those tenements have been transformed into spiffy apartments by junior investment bankers who like to dress up as punk rockers at night. The streets are still a little grungy, but the sidewalks are packed with young people heading to the bars and restaurants.

The night I stayed at SIXTY LES, jazz singer Madeleine Peyroux gave a free concert literally next door at Rockwood Music Hall. Proximity to entertainment like that, along with scores of great neighborhood restaurants and bars, are what make this location so appealing to the cool-hunting crowd.

The 2nd Avenue station on the F subway line is across the street from the hotel; doormen easily hail cabs on Houston Street.

Safety isn't a big issue: Active -- often very active -- nightlife in the area means heavy foot traffic around the hotel, most nights into the early-morning hours.

See MoreLocation

Airport

30 to 90 minutes from three airports.

New York City has three nearby airports: JFK, LaGuardia, and Newark (in New Jersey). Getting into town from JFK or LaGuardia is usually more convenient than from Newark, but travel times are heavily dependent on the time of day and traffic conditions. From JFK, a taxi to anywhere in Manhattan costs a flat rate of $45 and takes around an hour in average conditions. From LaGuardia, a metered cab ride to midtown Manhattan costs about $40 and can take 30 minutes if traffic is light, three times that if it's bad. Rides from Newark cost at least $40 plus tolls and can take more than 90 minutes. It's customary to tip your driver 15 to 25 percent.

Those looking to save some cash can use the privately run shuttle buses that are available at all three airports for about $14 per person. For more information on the shuttles, go to Super Shuttle or New York Airport Service. Public transit is also available for as little as $7 per person, but travel can take up to two hours and involve a lot of lugging bags up and down stairways.

See MoreAirport

Rooms

Large, fun, sleek faux-industrial designs; great views through floor-to-ceiling windows; comfortable beds; and up-to-date electronics.

SIXTY LES Review: What To REALLY Expect If You Stay (10)

The setting sun was shining through the gold chiffon curtain when I got to my queen superior room. A huge black-and-white Lee Friedlander photograph glowed on the lightbox headboard above the platform bed. And the glossy black wooden floors make everything in the room look as if they're almost floating in space. I have to admit, I felt momentarily transported.

The standard queen superior room is somewhere between 300 and 325 square feet in size, which is larger than the typical New York City hotel -- and floor-to-ceiling windows make the space feel even larger. The extremely comfortablebed has 400-thread-count sheets and a heavy duvet.The bathrooms are a little small, but the rainfall shower and qualityRENproduct easily make up for that.

There's a neat trapdoor-like compartment in the desk for plugging in your gadgets, and amodern, comfortable white-leather desk chair. The TV gets on-demand movies and premium channels. There's also an iPod docking station. The mini-fridge comes stocked with Dean and Deluca snacks.

An upgrade will get you a small sitting area and, if you go for a suite, a terrace. Because the hotel towers over the surrounding buildings, all rooms will have good views -- but I recommend those on the west side of the building, so you can catch the sunset.

See MoreRooms

Features

An extremely rare (but small) pool; a decent fitness center; an in-house spa; two bars; and a restaurant

There's an outdoor pool emblazoned with an image of Andy Warhol along the bottom. But it's only 3.5 feet deep and not really long enough for laps.

SIXTY LES has a private bar for guests and VIPs called Make Believe. The outdoor deck area, which has a retractable roof, has a lounge atmosphere. DJs spin regularly. There is also a poolside bar.

There's also a small fitness center with treadmills, elliptical machines, stairmasters, strength-training machines, and free weights.

Guests get free access to the spa, which has a sauna and a range of treatments.

See MoreFeatures

All-Inclusive / Food

The hotel offers on-site dining at Blue Ribbon Sushi Izakaya, and drinks atBlue Ribbon Beer Garden

The hotel opened Blue Ribbon Sushi Izakaya in 2012, a member of New York's popular Blue Ribbon Restaurants. The menu highlights sushi and family-style Japanese dishes like sashimi, meat skewers, and tempura. The restaurant even flies in fish from Japan daily.Blue Ribbon Beer Garden is an outdoor spot with communal tables and board games.

There are also plenty of dining options in the immediate area. Katz's Delicatessen, a classic spot that serves what's arguably the best pastrami sandwich in the universe, is just two blocks east on Houston Street. Elizabeth Street, which is lined with great restaurants like Cafe Habana and Peasant, is about a 10-minute walk.

See MoreAll-Inclusive / Food

Related Hotels

Mid-Range

  • Value

Comfort Inn Manhattan Bridge

Lower East Side

This Comfort Inn is simple value option with modern decor and few features. Basic but clean rooms are a good price for the location and within walking distance of many downtown locations. The excellent Chinese restaurants and knock-off stores of Chinatown are literally at your…

See Review

Upper-middle-range

  • Boutique

Sago Hotel

Lower East Side

The upper-middle-range Sago Hotel, located in the heart of the trendy Lower East Side, offers a fresh, industrial-chic vibe. Its 20 rooms reflect a boutique aesthetic with wood floors, concrete accent walls, and windows overlooking city views, plus fairly roomy bathrooms with walk-in showers. Amenities…

See Review

Mid-Range

  • Kid-Friendly
  • Romantic
  • Boutique

NobleDEN Hotel

Lower East Side

The three-pearl NobleDEN Hotel has few frills, but it’s clean, trendy, and surprisingly affordable (by NYC standards) for its convenient Little Italy location. The tourist-friendly Chinatown and SoHo areas are within walking distance, and several subway stations nearby provide easy access to other neighborhoods. The…

See Review

This Hotel Also Featured In

Travel Tips

9 Ways to Sleep Better in Any Hotel

A bed at the Secrets the Vine Cancun Resort and Spa. It’s a cruel paradox that right when you need sleep the most — when you’re jet lagged or weary from a day of sightseeing — is exactly when it proves to be so illusive. In a hotel, you snap to attention with every hallway…

Festivals and Parades

The 13 Music Festivals You Have to Go to This Summer

It’s almost summer, so it’s time for music lovers to untangle their flower crowns and fringed getups and try not to freak out about music festival season. As always, these events have packed cross-category rosters; for every major crowd-pleaser, there are dozens of emerging, experimental performers. Here are the multi-day, multi-stage, soul-freeing, body-rocking, roof-raising (except,…

Boutique

What $300/Night Gets You in NYC For Every Style

Taking a trip to New York City can be costly — city-priced co*cktails, broadway plays, museum tickets, and of course, hotel stays can all add up. If you’re looking to spend around $300/night for your stay, but don’t want to compromise your style, don’t fret! In a city that seems to have it all, this…

Celebrity

Mad Men: Hotels for Today's High-Powered Ad Executives

Photo Credit: Frank Ockenfels 3/AMC

Decor and Design

Lavish Linens: How the Finest Italian Sheets Stack Up

We’ll admit it: We are name-droppers here at Oyster. We love us some some soft Frette and Sferra sheets. So what exactly makes for soft, plush, feels-like-you’re-sleeping-on-a-cloud linens? As we learned from the hilarious Aziz Ansari, thread count isn’t everything. Hotels love to brag about it, but other factors like fiber quality, yarn size, and…

Decor and Design

Boys' club: 7 hotels with masculine style

We know, we know — not all boys like dark colors and clean lines, just the way not all girls like pastels and frills. But these seven hotels fit the stereotype, with design features like dark woods, leather, plaid, button couches, and low lighting. So if you dig the boys’ club vibe, dig in. Trump…

What's New

A side of bacon, hold the wait

Cafe Gitane

What's New

New York's best holiday markets

It’s been argued that the preponderance of chain stores — we’re looking at you, JC Penney, Pottery Barn, and Victoria’s Secret — have turned the streets of New York City into a giant mall. Escape that “we could be anywhere” feeling by shopping at the unique, holiday craft markets that pop up throughout the boroughs…

New York City’s best candy stores

’Tis the season for candy. Now that Halloween is over, it’s time to indulge in your left-over trick-or-treat goodies. At our house, we usually buy one bag of fun-size Skittles to hand out to trick-or-treaters, buy two bags to snack on while waiting for the doorbell to ring. But in the future, we just might…

Food and Drink

Seven hotels with celebrity chef room service

The Mercer Hotel in SoHo offers 24 hour room service from Jean-Georges Vongerichten’s Mercer Kitchen.

Read More Articles

Things You Should Know About SIXTY LES

Also Known As

  • Thompson Les New York City
  • Thompson Les Hotel
  • Thompson LES

Room Types

  • 1 Bedroom King Suite
  • Double Deluxe Room
  • King Superior Room
  • Loft
  • Queen Superior Room
  • Studio King Suite
  • Thompson Suite

Address

190 Allen St, New York City, New York 10002-1418, United States

Phone

(212) 460-5300

Website

Oyster Hotel Review

SIXTY LES

Hotel Class:Upscale

Scene

With its austere design, hip downtown Manhattan location, and plush amenities like a swimming pool, the SIXTY LES is a quintessential boho-chic luxury hotel.

SIXTY LES Review: What To REALLY Expect If You Stay (24)

Industrialchic? For sure. This is the Lower East Side, after all, once a tenement-filled haven for freshly arrived immigrants that, in recent years, has been transformed into a fashionable boutique-, restaurant-, and bar-filled haven for young urban professionals who like a little grit in their neighborhood. And the hotel, with its austere and rough-hewn yet distinctly luxurious design, fits in well -- even if the neighborhood seems like a surprising place for a luxury hotel.

Sure, there's a lot of pretension on display here. But the place also delivers: The staff is casual yet professional; the hotel really is beautiful (at least on the inside); the rooms are well-equipped with electronics and luxury comforts; and the lobby and bars draw a scene.

For all that you get at the SIXTY LES, room rates compare favorably to other downtown luxury boutiques, though it's worth also checking out sister property SIXTY SoHo, the company's SoHo flagship, as well as the Bowery Hotel, located a few blocks west and north.

See MoreScene

Location

Manhattan's Lower East Side has for the most part up and came, but it's still a little rough around the edges. Great restaurants and nightlife.

For most of the past century, the Lower East Side was the neighborhood where newly arrived immigrants packed into tenements while trying to grab a toehold here in America. Now those tenements have been transformed into spiffy apartments by junior investment bankers who like to dress up as punk rockers at night. The streets are still a little grungy, but the sidewalks are packed with young people heading to the bars and restaurants.

The night I stayed at SIXTY LES, jazz singer Madeleine Peyroux gave a free concert literally next door at Rockwood Music Hall. Proximity to entertainment like that, along with scores of great neighborhood restaurants and bars, are what make this location so appealing to the cool-hunting crowd.

The 2nd Avenue station on the F subway line is across the street from the hotel; doormen easily hail cabs on Houston Street.

Safety isn't a big issue: Active -- often very active -- nightlife in the area means heavy foot traffic around the hotel, most nights into the early-morning hours.

See MoreLocation

Airport

30 to 90 minutes from three airports.

New York City has three nearby airports: JFK, LaGuardia, and Newark (in New Jersey). Getting into town from JFK or LaGuardia is usually more convenient than from Newark, but travel times are heavily dependent on the time of day and traffic conditions. From JFK, a taxi to anywhere in Manhattan costs a flat rate of $45 and takes around an hour in average conditions. From LaGuardia, a metered cab ride to midtown Manhattan costs about $40 and can take 30 minutes if traffic is light, three times that if it's bad. Rides from Newark cost at least $40 plus tolls and can take more than 90 minutes. It's customary to tip your driver 15 to 25 percent.

Those looking to save some cash can use the privately run shuttle buses that are available at all three airports for about $14 per person. For more information on the shuttles, go to Super Shuttle or New York Airport Service. Public transit is also available for as little as $7 per person, but travel can take up to two hours and involve a lot of lugging bags up and down stairways.

See MoreAirport

Rooms

Large, fun, sleek faux-industrial designs; great views through floor-to-ceiling windows; comfortable beds; and up-to-date electronics.

SIXTY LES Review: What To REALLY Expect If You Stay (25)

The setting sun was shining through the gold chiffon curtain when I got to my queen superior room. A huge black-and-white Lee Friedlander photograph glowed on the lightbox headboard above the platform bed. And the glossy black wooden floors make everything in the room look as if they're almost floating in space. I have to admit, I felt momentarily transported.

The standard queen superior room is somewhere between 300 and 325 square feet in size, which is larger than the typical New York City hotel -- and floor-to-ceiling windows make the space feel even larger. The extremely comfortablebed has 400-thread-count sheets and a heavy duvet.The bathrooms are a little small, but the rainfall shower and qualityRENproduct easily make up for that.

There's a neat trapdoor-like compartment in the desk for plugging in your gadgets, and amodern, comfortable white-leather desk chair. The TV gets on-demand movies and premium channels. There's also an iPod docking station. The mini-fridge comes stocked with Dean and Deluca snacks.

An upgrade will get you a small sitting area and, if you go for a suite, a terrace. Because the hotel towers over the surrounding buildings, all rooms will have good views -- but I recommend those on the west side of the building, so you can catch the sunset.

See MoreRooms

Features

An extremely rare (but small) pool; a decent fitness center; an in-house spa; two bars; and a restaurant

There's an outdoor pool emblazoned with an image of Andy Warhol along the bottom. But it's only 3.5 feet deep and not really long enough for laps.

SIXTY LES has a private bar for guests and VIPs called Make Believe. The outdoor deck area, which has a retractable roof, has a lounge atmosphere. DJs spin regularly. There is also a poolside bar.

There's also a small fitness center with treadmills, elliptical machines, stairmasters, strength-training machines, and free weights.

Guests get free access to the spa, which has a sauna and a range of treatments.

See MoreFeatures

All-Inclusive / Food

The hotel offers on-site dining at Blue Ribbon Sushi Izakaya, and drinks atBlue Ribbon Beer Garden

The hotel opened Blue Ribbon Sushi Izakaya in 2012, a member of New York's popular Blue Ribbon Restaurants. The menu highlights sushi and family-style Japanese dishes like sashimi, meat skewers, and tempura. The restaurant even flies in fish from Japan daily.Blue Ribbon Beer Garden is an outdoor spot with communal tables and board games.

There are also plenty of dining options in the immediate area. Katz's Delicatessen, a classic spot that serves what's arguably the best pastrami sandwich in the universe, is just two blocks east on Houston Street. Elizabeth Street, which is lined with great restaurants like Cafe Habana and Peasant, is about a 10-minute walk.

See MoreAll-Inclusive / Food

Amenities

  • Air Conditioner

  • Balcony / Terrace / Patio

  • Cable

  • Concierge

  • Cribs

  • Dry Cleaning

  • Fitness Center

  • Full Kitchen

  • Internet

  • Kids Allowed

  • Laundry

  • Meeting / Conference Rooms

  • Mini Bar (with liquor)

  • Pool

  • Room Service

  • Separate Bedroom / Living Room Space

  • Smoking Rooms Available

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.

SIXTY LES Review: What To REALLY Expect If You Stay (2024)

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Kelle Weber

Last Updated:

Views: 6265

Rating: 4.2 / 5 (73 voted)

Reviews: 88% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Kelle Weber

Birthday: 2000-08-05

Address: 6796 Juan Square, Markfort, MN 58988

Phone: +8215934114615

Job: Hospitality Director

Hobby: tabletop games, Foreign language learning, Leather crafting, Horseback riding, Swimming, Knapping, Handball

Introduction: My name is Kelle Weber, I am a magnificent, enchanting, fair, joyous, light, determined, joyous person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.