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The (Un) Making of the American Gentleman

Three storied hotels have undergone extensive renovations in the last decade: the St. Regis (opened in 1904) and the second Waldorf-Astoria (1931) in New York, and the Ritz (1898) in Paris. And despite some muddled rhetoric about places that are both “timeless” and “new,” all three manage to selectively tap the past.

At the Waldorf, in the interest of enhanced service, the number of guest rooms has been halved and made at least twice as large. Suites are given the names of bygone guests, Cole Porter’s piano has a proud place in the lobby, and even the structure itself has been changed to create effects that the builders of the original 1931 edifice had planned to execute but did not have the skills to do. The Peacock Alley, where the fashionable strolled and strutted, happy to be seen, has been brought back to its old elegance.

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