| | Travel Newsletter Winter escapes don't have to mean boarding a plane. From design-forward Catskills retreats and a chandelier-lit stay in Central Jersey to a Tuscan-inspired enclave in New Hampshire, a classic Nantucket hideaway, and a coal-country gem near the Poconos, these five Northeast addresses make a compelling case for staying closer to home for your next getaway. | | | | Red Cottage Northeast, US The best weekend stays start before you even unpack. With Red Cottage, that feeling usually hits somewhere between the last winding road and the first deep breath of pine-cold air. Their homes are scattered across the Hudson Valley and Catskills and beyond—some all wood beams and stone fireplaces, others clean-lined and modern A-frames, set against wide, cinematic views. In winter, you're within striking distance of Hunter or Windham; in warmer months, it's lakes, long dinners, and mornings that stretch. It doesn't feel like a rental. It feels like borrowing someone's very good taste—and their better address—for a few days. | | | ChΓ’teau Grande Hotel East Brunswick, NJ You don't expect to find a bit of European flair just off Route 18—but that's part of the fun. ChΓ’teau Grande Hotel has the kind of sweeping entry and chandelier-lit interiors that make even a quick overnight feel momentous. The energy shifts by the night: weddings spilling out of the ballroom, couples lingering at the bar, locals dressed up for dinner at Orchard Park. Upstairs, rooms are calm and contemporary, a soft landing after the buzz below. It's polished without being stiff—a reminder that in Jersey, we clean up very well when we want to. | | | The Artisan at Tuscan Village, a Tribute Portfolio Hotel Salem, NH Pull into The Artisan at Tuscan Village, and it feels like someone pressed pause on New England and overlaid a bit of Italy. The Artisan sits at the center of it all, steps from espresso counters, a sprawling Italian market, and restaurants that fill quickly on Saturday nights. Rooms are understated—muted tones, plush beds, space to exhale after an indulgent dinner downstairs. In warmer weather, the lawn and terrace draw a crowd; in colder months, the mood turns cozy and convivial. It's less about sightseeing and more about settling in—eating well, walking everywhere, repeating the ritual the next day. | | | The Nantucket Inn Nantucket, MA There's something reassuring about The Nantucket Inn. Maybe it's the courtyard layout, with rooms opening onto landscaped gardens, or the fact that after a windswept beach day you can retreat to the island's only hotel indoor pool. It sits just outside downtown, which means you get the quiet when you want it and a quick shuttle ride when you don't. Days unfold easily here—tennis in the morning, bike rides toward Surfside, hydrangeas everywhere in season. It's unfussy, comfortable, and distinctly Nantucket without trying too hard to prove it whether you visit in winter or summer. | | | Hotel Anthracite Scranton, PA Hotel Anthracite nods to the region's coal-mining past without turning the weekend getaway into a museum. Black-and-white photographs line the walls; beyond the windows, the hills roll toward the Poconos. After a day at Elk Mountain or hiking nearby trails, the hotel feels like a welcome return: solid, warm, quietly stylish. Dinner at the steakhouse downstairs feels classic, the kind of place where conversations stretch into the wee hours of the early morning. It's a reminder that some of the Northeast's most interesting stays aren't in the loudest towns—they're tucked into places with a storied past. | | Interested in advertising in this newsletter? | |
No comments:
Post a Comment