The Greener Guide to Seeing New York More Sustainably
Urban farms, zero-waste shops and LEED gold-certified hotels make up our light-touch list of things to do in the ever-green Big Apple.
Jay-Z’s “Empire State of Mind” lyrics need an update. Because while it may not be immediately obvious, New York is the concrete jungle where eco-friendly dreams are made of. With increasingly green buildings (thanks to new builds and retrofits) and a growing number of sustainable restaurants, bars and shops, it’s never been easier to explore NYC while minimizing your impact on the environment.
1 Hotel Brooklyn Bridge
Boutique Hotel, Eco Hotel
Sustainability comes front and center at this LEED gold-certified hotel. The plant-filled lobby features furniture made from reclaimed wood and a selection of complimentary wonky, curvy, not-quite-perfect produce to help reduce food waste. You’ll find a filtered water faucet in your room – so you won’t be tempted by single-use plastics – and a shower timer to help you save on water consumption. Guests get shuttled around in an all-electric Audi e-tron, and staff get paid volunteer days. Eco-luxury at its best.
Package Free
Shop
This sustainable homeware shop in Brooklyn is the brainchild of Lauren Singer, the zero-waste influencer who went viral in 2014 for producing only a jar’s worth of trash over an entire year. Come for the packaging-free shampoo bars, compostable tote bags and eco-friendly beauty products, and leave with a new-found determination to downsize your impact.
Pendry Manhattan West
Hotel
Box-fresh Pendry Manhattan West sits within an eco-friendly complex that uses solar panels, rainwater reclamation and a rooftop apiary to boost its green credentials. The hotel’s parent company Montage International is committed to social and environmental sustainability, with health and wellbeing-focused design (resulting in light, airy spaces featuring natural materials) and plenty of rooms for guests with accessibility needs.
Rhodora Wine Bar
Wine Bar, Wine
The natural, low-intervention wines at Rhodora are sourced from small-scale producers and served alongside sustainable, Mediterranean-inspired small plates of tinned fish and hard cheeses. The bar is carbon negative and zero waste, meaning they use no single-use plastics and send absolutely nothing to landfill. Not a wine buff? Friendly staff can help you choose a tipple to suit your tastes. Consider trying a trendy orange wine – in vogue for their low-impact production techniques.
New York Botanical Garden
Botanical Garden, Museum, Park, Zoo
Motto by Hilton New York City Chelsea
Hotel
Rooms at this Chelsea hotel are stylish, affordable and energy-efficient. As a brand, Hilton has committed to halving its environmental footprint and doubling its investment in social impact by 2030. It aims to cut food waste, water use and general waste output by 50%, too. For now, guest stays and hotel operations are carbon offset, plastic straws have been eradicated from all properties and, at Motto, hydration stations encourage the use of reusable water bottles.
Olmsted
Restaurant, American
Metropolis Vintage
Shop
New York’s shopping scene is unbeatable. So, if you’re in the mood for some retail therapy, but want to avoid fast fashion, choose the sustainable option and shop secondhand. There are countless thrift stores across the city, but Metropolis Vintage – while not the cheapest – is one of the biggest and best, with a well-curated collection of rock tees, ’80s bomber jackets and palm-printed Hawaiian shirts.