Boston Home

A century after its debut, the Upper East Side staple continues to set the standard for chic New York City elegance through bold design, rich history, and cultural cachet.

Sign up for our weekly home and property newsletter, featuring homes for sale, neighborhood happenings, and more.

A table covered with a white tablecloth holds several upside-down glasses with white covers, two large covered silver serving dishes, a bottle of water, a small bowl of green dip, a plate with pieces of smoked salmon or similar fish garnished with herbs, a metal container with breadsticks wrapped in paper, a small vase with white flowers, and a stack of white napkins. A person wearing a white jacket is partially visible behind the table. The scene is reflected in a mirror behind the table.

Photo by Oliver Pilcher

​​​​This article is from the spring 2026 issue of Boston Home. Sign up here to receive a subscription.

Tucked along a tree-lined stretch of Madison Avenue, the Mark Hotel stands as one of New York’s most distinctive addresses—a place where Upper East Side tradition and contemporary glamour meet with effortless polish. When the original Mark opened in 1927, the neighborhood was transforming from a quiet residential enclave into one of the city’s most refined corridors. The hotel quickly became a preferred retreat for well-heeled travelers seeking both discretion and proximity to Central Park and Museum Mile.

Nearly a century later, that legacy is newly celebrated in The Mark, a new Assouline volume by New York Times bestselling author Derek Blasberg. The book traces the hotel’s evolution—from its early days as an understated residence hotel to its present role as a cultural touchpoint woven into the fabric of uptown life.

The entrance of The Mark hotel features a classic brick facade with large windows and a black and gold awning displaying "THE MARK." Four flags are mounted above the entrance, including two American flags, a New York state flag, and a French flag. Two potted green shrubs flank the doorway, and a black carpet with the hotel's logo leads inside. On either side of the entrance are black awnings for adjacent businesses, with outdoor seating areas shaded by striped umbrellas. A small cart with a hot dog sign is positioned near the left side of the entrance.

Photo by Adrian Gaut

A hardcover book titled "THE MARK" with a colorful illustrated cover depicting five people dressed in formal attire, holding drinks and socializing against a nighttime cityscape background. The spine and bottom of the cover feature the publisher's name, "ASSOULINE.

As The Mark homes in on its centennial, the recently released Assouline volume celebrates the hotel’s design and culture.

The Mark’s most defining reinvention came in 2009, when French designer Jacques Grange undertook a top-to-bottom transformation that honored the building’s prewar architecture while projecting it confidently into the 21st century. Grange’s eclectic blend of Parisian chic, bold geometry, and meticulous craftsmanship reshaped the hotel’s identity. The lobby’s now-iconic black-and-white striped marble floor nods subtly to the art deco era while introducing an unmistakably modern visual rhythm. Throughout public spaces and guest rooms, curated artworks and custom furnishings reflect contributions by creative luminaries including Karl Lagerfeld, Guy de Rougemont, Paul Mathieu, and Mattia Bonetti.

The guest rooms build on this dialogue between past and present. Lacquered details and tailored monochromatic palettes evoke European modernism, while plush textiles and oversized soaking tubs offer the comforts expected of a 21st-century luxury stay. Many suites frame sweeping Central Park views—reminders of the hotel’s longstanding relationship with the neighborhood surrounding it. The penthouse, meanwhile, channels the grand scale of early-20th-century apartments, reinterpreted with contemporary opulence.

A black flower cart with a striped beige and white canopy labeled

Photo by Adrian Gaut

Over the years, The Mark has cultivated a cultural identity few hotels can claim. Its role as the unofficial headquarters for the Met Gala underscores its place in the city’s creative ecosystem, while curated guest experiences—from a private sailboat to the cheeky Bergdorf Goodman Express pedicab—broaden its sense of playful sophistication.

Rooftop patio with a round white table surrounded by six wicker chairs, decorated with a vase of pink flowers and a small plant. The patio has large potted shrubs and overlooks a city skyline with numerous tall buildings under a partly cloudy sky.

On the rooftop, private dining is available with a bird’s-eye view of the city. / Photo by Adrian Gaut

First published in the print edition of Boston Home’s Spring 2026 issue, with the headline “Uptown Original.”