Nomo SoHo at 9 Crosby Street occupies the southern end of SoHo where the neighbourhood transitions into Chinatown and Little Italy — the most culturally layered corner of downtown Manhattan, where the cast-iron loft buildings give way to the densely mercantile street life of Canal Street below. The 264 rooms provide the modern boutique standard at a price point below the Crosby Street Hotel and the Mercer, with a rooftop pool that the neighbourhood's larger boutiques conspicuously lack.
The rooms are designed with the contemporary Downtown vocabulary — clean lines, quality linens, and the SoHo street views that the building's Crosby Street position delivers. The rooftop pool, heated seasonally, provides the outdoor social amenity that turns the hotel's position at SoHo's southern edge into an operational advantage: the view from the roof captures both the cast-iron skyline of SoHo's commercial heart to the north and the mixed-use density of the canal corridor to the south.
Nomo Kitchen handles the food and beverage programme as an all-day restaurant and bar with the Downtown casual-dining quality that the SoHo neighbourhood's independent restaurant concentration requires hotel kitchens to match. The rooftop pool bar extends the social infrastructure vertically.
Crosby Street's Chinatown-adjacent position provides the cultural and culinary density that makes Nomo SoHo's neighbourhood fundamentally different from the Mercer's Prince Street corner or the Soho Grand's West Broadway address. Canal Street's food markets, the Chinatown restaurant circuit, and the SoHo gallery corridor are all within a five-minute walk. For guests who want SoHo with Chinatown access, the position is unique.
The rooftop pool, the Chinatown food market access, and the SoHo gallery corridor create the solo retreat with the most culturally varied immediate neighbourhood in downtown Manhattan. The Canal Street morning market, the afternoon gallery openings on West Broadway, and the evening restaurant circuit from the kitchen's downtown circuit provide the working week's cultural programme.
The rooftop pool and the neighbourhood's cultural density — the Chinatown food scene, the SoHo bar corridor, the East Village clubs accessible by foot — create the downtown bachelor/bachelorette programme for groups who want neighbourhood exploration alongside hotel infrastructure. The rooftop pool anchors the afternoon; the neighbourhood provides the rest.
From $250/night; suites from $500/night. Check availability at nomosoho.com.
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