If Sean Roland and Gabe Katz really cared about the residents in the neighborhood surrounding their business complex, there would be something on their website telling and showing their guests and customers where to park and not to park when they arrive in the dense residential area that's never had a retail business and certainly has no space for one of the scale of the PBH. They claim to care, but they don't. Shame on them.
Congratulations to Pocketbook Factory on this stunning and well-deserved feature in Vogue. The spaces are truly extraordinary, and you’ve brought a level of refinement and sophistication to Hudson that has, frankly, been overdue.
Hopefully, in time, even the more… tradition-bound corners of the neighborhood will come to appreciate what a remarkable addition you are to both the community and the city. Change can be a challenge, especially when one is very comfortable with the familiar.
In the meantime, everyone I speak with can’t stop raving about the hotel. I’ve even been hearing that employees genuinely enjoy working there—which, in Hudson’s hospitality scene, is no small feat. It’s refreshing to see a place where both guests and staff seem to be having a consistently positive experience.
If Sean Roland and Gabe Katz really cared about the residents in the neighborhood surrounding their business complex, there would be something on their website telling and showing their guests and customers where to park and not to park when they arrive in the dense residential area that's never had a retail business and certainly has no space for one of the scale of the PBH. They claim to care, but they don't. Shame on them.
ReplyDeleteThere’s two empty lots across the street from PB by the Firestation.
ReplyDeleteThe PB may want to purchase the land.
Congratulations to Pocketbook Factory on this stunning and well-deserved feature in Vogue. The spaces are truly extraordinary, and you’ve brought a level of refinement and sophistication to Hudson that has, frankly, been overdue.
ReplyDeleteHopefully, in time, even the more… tradition-bound corners of the neighborhood will come to appreciate what a remarkable addition you are to both the community and the city. Change can be a challenge, especially when one is very comfortable with the familiar.
In the meantime, everyone I speak with can’t stop raving about the hotel. I’ve even been hearing that employees genuinely enjoy working there—which, in Hudson’s hospitality scene, is no small feat. It’s refreshing to see a place where both guests and staff seem to be having a consistently positive experience.