IDA 2024 NOW OPEN -- Early Bird Deadline May 30, 2024
Share on Social Media
The Knickerbocker Hotel, Gabellini Sheppard Associates | International Design Awards Winners
The Knickerbocker Hotel, Gabellini Sheppard Associates | International Design Awards Winners
The Knickerbocker Hotel, Gabellini Sheppard Associates | International Design Awards Winners
The Knickerbocker Hotel, Gabellini Sheppard Associates | International Design Awards Winners
The Knickerbocker Hotel, Gabellini Sheppard Associates | International Design Awards Winners
The Knickerbocker Hotel, Gabellini Sheppard Associates | International Design Awards Winners
The Knickerbocker Hotel, Gabellini Sheppard Associates | International Design Awards Winners
The Knickerbocker Hotel, Gabellini Sheppard Associates | International Design Awards Winners
The Knickerbocker Hotel, Gabellini Sheppard Associates | International Design Awards Winners
The Knickerbocker Hotel, Gabellini Sheppard Associates | International Design Awards Winners

The Knickerbocker Hotel

CompanyGabellini Sheppard Associates
Lead DesignersMichael Gabellini & Kimberly Sheppard
ClientGabellini Sheppard
Prize(s)Gold in Interior Design / Renovation
Entry Description

The renovation and restoration of The Knickerbocker
Hotel, a fifteen-story, 175,000SF landmark Beaux-Arts
building, is a modern interpretation to recapture the
historic hotel from 1906, for the present traveler. The
330-key hotel was conceived as a sanctuary from the
urban animation. Illuminated screens and a textural
material palette within the spaces harness the city’s
energy throughout the volume. The L-shaped lobby
creates a grand, yet intimate arrival experience. The
reception is punctuated by a monolithic stone elevator
bank, forming a foyer to the espresso café. The hotel’s
primary public fourth floor utilizes partitioning among
seating areas, defining each area. Through the library,
the 122-seat restaurant encourages social gathering.
The rooftop is a carved within the historic oxidized
copper along the mansard roof are private seating
areas, employing space originally used for flagpoles
supports. The adaptive reuse of the rooftop area
salvages the historic shell to celebrate the building’s
architecture.

http://www.gabellinisheppard.com/
http://www.theknickerbocker.com/