Costamar
Hotels / Search
Beacon

star star star star 2130 Broadway at 75th Street, Near Beacon Theater, New York, New York 10023, United States

  • Beacon

    Beacon

  • Beacon

    Beacon

  • Beacon

    Beacon

  • Beacon

    Beacon

  • Beacon

    Beacon

  • Beacon

    Beacon

  • Beacon

    Beacon

  • Beacon

    Beacon

  • Beacon

    Beacon

New York
Designed by architect Walter Ahlschlager in the beaux-arts style in 1928, Hotel Beacon opened its doors alongside the Beacon Theatre to a great amount of buzz. At 24 stories high, it towered above all other buildings in the neighborhood and rivaled the skyscrapers of Midtown Manhattan. Yet the most talked about piece of the Hotel Beacon wasn’t its height - it was its beacon. One of only three hotels in all of New York City to install an airway beacon on its roof, the beacon at the hotel wasn’t just seen as a novelty, it was a visual representation of the modern marvels of the day. In fact, just one year before, Charles Lindbergh had completed his first solo transatlantic flight - and for a short period of time, it seemed like every new skyscraper was installing an airway beacon as part of the growing excitement. The head of the Hotel Beacon construction, J. Henry Small, caught the city’s beacon craze and commissioned the Sperry Gyroscope Company for a beacon 5 feet in diameter with 1.2 billion candles in power. Such an impressive instrument called for an impressive opening - which it was. The hotel’s beacon was christened with an elaborate ceremony, in which a plane flew through a thunderstorm over the hotel, with Hotel Beacon providing the guiding light.
Highlights

starExcellent

rate_reviewExcellent budget hotel. Close to Starbucks. Great rooms in excellent location.

placeLocated near shopping areas and has easy access to public transportation.

Availability
date_range Check-in date
date_range Check-out date
hotel Rooms
people Guests
Location

2130 Broadway at 75th Street, Near Beacon Theater, New York, New York 10023, United States

 close
Points of interest

Beacon

Designed by architect Walter Ahlschlager in the beaux-arts style in 1928, Hotel Beacon opened its doors alongside the Beacon Theatre to a great amount of buzz. At 24 stories high, it towered above all other buildings in the neighborhood and rivaled the skyscrapers of Midtown Manhattan. Yet the most talked about piece of the Hotel Beacon wasn’t its height - it was its beacon. One of only three hotels in all of New York City to install an airway beacon on its roof, the beacon at the hotel wasn’t just seen as a novelty, it was a visual representation of the modern marvels of the day. In fact, just one year before, Charles Lindbergh had completed his first solo transatlantic flight - and for a short period of time, it seemed like every new skyscraper was installing an airway beacon as part of the growing excitement. The head of the Hotel Beacon construction, J. Henry Small, caught the city’s beacon craze and commissioned the Sperry Gyroscope Company for a beacon 5 feet in diameter with 1.2 billion candles in power. Such an impressive instrument called for an impressive opening - which it was. The hotel’s beacon was christened with an elaborate ceremony, in which a plane flew through a thunderstorm over the hotel, with Hotel Beacon providing the guiding light.


Searching hotels

Please wait...