Get in touch with us

79 Division St, New York, NY, United States

+1(212)343-4243

contact@hotelmimosany.com



Activities

Things to Do in New York City

Activities around Hotel Mimosa


Walking Tours & Private Tours 

We love and recommend Sights By Sam (917-242-8421, www.sightsbysam.com) to our valued guests so they can craft their own slice of New York during their stay. What we like about Sights By Sam is it's totally customizable, so call them and get going!


The Streets of Old (and New) Chinatown 

Doyers Street and Pell Street occupy much of the history of an infamous Chinatown of the early 20th century and before. Tunnels, gangs, opium, gambling. The 19th century Italian architecture can be especially seen on these streets of traditional Chinatown. Look to the cornices on top of the buildings. While there are about three or four tunnels left in Chinatown (if you can't find them please ask, we can point the way), the romantic intrigue is largely embedded in history now.

New York as Book Country


From the era of Scribner’s, Gotham Book Mart, the Seven Gables Bookshop and the bookstalls on 4th avenue. Manhattan still has its share of delights for the book lover.


Here is Mimosa’s private list of some places for happy book hunting!









Argosy Bookshop

116 E 59th St.

Arguably Manhattan’s most beautiful and best book shop. Take their old fashioned private elevator upstairs to shop for prints. Their personal service (something Hotel Mimosa really values) is impeccable.

Books of Wonder

18 W 18th St.

Specialty book store for children’s books, including rare collectible books.

Chartswell Bookstore

55 E 52nd St.

Housed in a old New York landmark building which has other eclectic shops is this specialty bookstore that sells books by and about Winston Churchill. 

The Corner Bookstore

1313 Madison Ave.

A long standing beautiful bookstore on Madison Ave with old style personal service that stores like Scribners used to have.

Kinokuniya Bookstore

1073 6th Ave

This shop has books, magazines, gifts and toys from Japan. They have a wonderful informal café which often host cosplay events on the weekends.

Kitchen arts and letters

1435 Lexington Ave

The best wine and cookbook store in the city, well worth the trip uptown. Has extensive collectible cookbooks as well.

Mysterious Bookshop

1099, 58 Warren St.

This specialty store has book signings and rare mystery books. It has one of the most comprehensive collections of Sherlockiana and Sherlock Holmes pastiche novels, as well as their own published reproductions of famous detective novels. 

Neue Galerie Design & Book store

1048 5th Ave.

This jewel of a space for design and architecture monographs is right next to the famous Sabarsky Café. We recommend this café elsewhere for superb Viennese coffee and pastries. 

The New York Public Library at Grand Central

42nd St.- 476 5th Ave.

Houses many collections and has wonderful, eclectic reading rooms, such as the Map Room on the ground floor. 

Pierpont Morgan Library

 225 Madison Ave

The museum is free Friday nights from 7-9 pm. Come also for the classical music in the atrium and their two gift shops. 

Strand’s Rare Book Room

828 Broadway

This treasure trove is located above the largest bookstore in Manhattan. 

Three Lives & Company

154 W 10th St.

Since 1968 this lovely snug book shop has been a place for book lovers in the west village. We recommend having a meal at the Spotted Pig afterwards and a drink at the White Horse Tavern for a fantastic West Village evening.   

Winter Food


What to eat when the temperature is 27 degrees Fahrenheit (-2.22 Celsius)? We love to go to King’s Kitchen and eat Cantonese when it snows and we want some food that will take the chill away. Fast. Rice Congee (or porridge) with pork and preserved eggs arrives so hot here it will take you time to eat or you will burn yourself. We love their delectable wasabi fried mushrooms as a perfect pairing to the congee. These wasabi-flavored appetizers taste almost like oysters. A very warming beverage is their fresh ginger honey, so invigorating! Another specialty is their custom made hot pot rice casseroles in which you choose the ingredients yourself. Try chicken, mushrooms & sausage, or eel with scallions (as pictured below). There’s a sweet soy sauce for the rice casserole, or a homemade red pepper sauce on every table. If you’re in a hurry you can order any roasted meat (pork, duck, chicken) over rice, it literally takes two minutes to arrive. We always encourage our guests to go deep into Chinatown but you have to go to Brooklyn to eat this variety of dishes and when it’s 27 degrees or snowing why not just go around the corner from Mimosa! 

The Hip and Trendy Lower East Side


Our hotel is perfectly situated near the beginning of the shopping district and the Lower East Side (the LES) where there is much to see and do.


If you walk only 35 minutes up from Orchard or Ludlow streets (please see our map of our hotel area), you will see an architectural collage as each neighborhood unfolds into the next. Near our hotel a historic Jewish neighborhood has metamorphized with the newest boutiques shops, bars and cafes. At Essex and Grand street, you might recall scenes from the film “Crossing Delancey”. When you reach Houston Street, you will see a 1970’s neighborhood largely unchanged, which also sidetracks to Alphabet City, a beatnik area of the 1990’s. Reaching St. Marks Place a mixture of Polish and Japanese flavors come into view. On 3rd avenue & St. Marks (or thereabouts) if you look 360 degrees, you will see the most energetic display of architecture in the LES. If you head west, you will eventually reach the old Greenwich Village (in 10 minutes) but if you stay on 2nd avenue, a dense collection of eateries takes you up to 14th street where you should make a left, heading west to Union Square, the next popular area. From there continue to proceed along 14th street to the beginning of Fifth Avenue and head uptown. 17th and 18th streets are particularly nice for eating and shopping. Herald Square (34th street) is a vast area worth exploring. Of particular note is the Korean neighborhood at 32nd street. Finally you can head up to 42nd st, which is Midtown Manhattan. We love Bryant Park, Times Square and the Grand Central station as three vantage points from which to explore. The total walking trip from our hotel to 42nd street is approximately 1 hour, without stops. 

Share by: