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    Hotel in Windham, United States

    Eastwind

    625pts

    Scandinavian-Inflected Catskills Revival

    Eastwind, Hotel in Windham

    About Eastwind

    A 19-room Catskills lodge that earned a Michelin Key in 2024, Eastwind sits at the intersection of Scandinavian modernist design and upstate New York's revived outdoor-travel scene. Vintage furniture and Frette linens share space with seven A-frame pod cabins set back into the hillside. At $199 per night, it occupies a deliberate middle register: design-conscious without being precious, casual without feeling cheap.

    Where the Catskills Revival Gets Its Aesthetic Argument

    The Catskills spent several decades existing mostly in retrospect, a place that felt historic but not current, scenic but not sought-after. That changed as outdoor travel climbed the priority list for New York City residents willing to make a two-hour drive for altitude, clean air, and lodging that didn't require a compromise on design. The properties that have done the most to accelerate this shift are not the grand old resorts operating on legacy reputation. They are smaller, architecturally specific hotels that offer a point of view rather than a points program. Eastwind, on Route 23 in Windham, belongs firmly to that cohort.

    The building itself is a 1920s-era lodge, and its redesign makes no attempt to disguise that origin. The bones of the structure remain visible in the way the public spaces feel generous but not corporate, and in the way the whole property carries a certain earthbound weight that newer builds rarely manage. What the redesign added is a Scandinavian modernist sensibility, one that keeps surfaces clean, materials honest, and color palettes drawn from the surrounding landscape rather than imposed upon it. The combination produces something the Catskills region has lacked for a long time: a lodge that feels rooted rather than retrofitted.

    The Design Logic of a 19-Room Property

    At 19 rooms across its main building and outlying cabins, Eastwind operates at a scale that changes how design decisions land. In a property this size, every furniture selection, every textile choice, and every material specification is visible to almost every guest. There is no back-of-house corridor where things relax into mediocrity. Vintage furniture and Frette linens appear together without irony here, which is a harder thing to pull off than it sounds. The tendency in design-led boutique hotels is to lean so hard into one aesthetic register that the other suffers. A property goes either very precious or very rustic, and rarely holds both in honest tension. Eastwind holds both.

    The seven pod-like A-frame cabins represent the property's most deliberate spatial argument. They sacrifice square footage in exchange for something harder to engineer: a genuine sense of immersion in the surrounding landscape. The A-frame format, associated with mid-century mountain retreats across the northeastern United States, has been revived at properties from the Adirondacks down through the Hudson Valley. What distinguishes the execution here is that the cabins read as considered rather than nostalgic. The format is the point, not the throwback.

    This design philosophy places Eastwind in a peer set that spans well beyond the Catskills. Properties like Troutbeck in Amenia have anchored the Hudson Valley's design-led lodging tier from the south. Further afield, properties such as Post Ranch Inn in Big Sur and Ambiente in Sedona represent the same impulse applied to more dramatically photogenic terrain. The Catskills version is quieter and less theatrical about its natural surroundings, which is consistent with the region's character. This is not a landscape that announces itself.

    Atmosphere: High-Design, Deliberately Casual

    The design ambition at Eastwind does not translate into the kind of stiff, self-conscious atmosphere that often accompanies it. The property maintains what might be described as a high-design summer-camp register, where things are clearly considered but no one is pretending the dress code matters. The public spaces stay socially active without feeling crowded, a product of the property's size rather than any particular programming strategy. When a hotel has 19 rooms, the lobby bar and common areas will naturally achieve a density that feels alive rather than thin, and Eastwind manages this without scaling up to the point where intimacy dissolves.

    This puts it at a remove from the formal luxury tier represented by properties like The Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York City or Aman New York, and equally distinct from the full-service resort model of Canyon Ranch Tucson. Eastwind is not structured around programming or spa infrastructure. It is structured around a physical environment that encourages guests to decide for themselves what relaxation looks like. That is its own kind of luxury, and it is well-suited to the Catskills, where the appeal has always been fundamentally about being in a place, not being organized by one.

    Michelin Recognition and What It Signals

    Eastwind received a Michelin Key in 2024. The Michelin Key program, launched as an extension of the guide's hospitality coverage, evaluates hotels on design, service quality, and the coherence of the guest experience. A single Key places Eastwind in a tier of properties that Michelin considers worth a special trip, without the additional layering of two or three Keys that attaches to properties like Amangiri or Blackberry Farm. For a 19-room property at $199 per night in a region still establishing its credentials, the recognition carries weight disproportionate to the room count. It confirms that the design and operational standards hold up against a serious framework for evaluation, not just against regional expectations.

    At that price point, Eastwind occupies an interesting position in the broader market for design-led rural retreats. It is accessible relative to peers like SingleThread Farm Inn in Healdsburg or Auberge du Soleil in Napa, where room rates enter a different bracket entirely, while still positioning above the category of roadside-modernized motor lodges that have proliferated across the Catskills in recent years. It holds a credible middle ground, and the Michelin recognition gives that positioning an external reference point.

    Practical Information and Planning

    Eastwind sits at 5088 NY-23 in Windham, New York, approximately two hours north of New York City by car. The property is spread across the main lodge building and a cluster of A-frame cabins on the grounds. Rooms are distributed across several configurations including rooms, suites, and studios in the main structure, with the seven pod cabins offering a more isolated experience for guests who prioritize proximity to the outdoors over interior square footage. Rates begin at $199 per night. Properties of this scale in the current Catskills market fill considerably faster than their room count might suggest, particularly on weekends from late spring through early fall. Booking well in advance is not a precaution so much as a requirement. Guests unable to secure availability directly should contact EP Club, as we maintain relationships across the small-luxury tier in this region. For broader context on what else the area offers, see our full Windham restaurants guide.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What is the general vibe of Eastwind?
    Casual but considered. The property carries Scandinavian modernist design references through a 1920s lodge structure, with vintage furniture and quality linens appearing side by side. The atmosphere in the public spaces is social without being crowded, and the overall register is closer to a well-designed mountain retreat than a formal hotel. The Michelin Key recognition in 2024 confirms that the experience holds up against external evaluation criteria, not just regional comparison. At $199 per night, the price-to-design ratio is a significant part of what drives the property's reputation.
    What is the leading room type at Eastwind?
    The answer depends on what you are optimizing for. The seven A-frame pod cabins sacrifice some interior space in exchange for a more direct relationship with the surrounding landscape. For guests whose primary reason for coming to the Catskills is the outdoor environment, the cabins deliver that more completely than the main-building rooms. For guests who want the full lodge experience with more flexible space, the suites and studios in the main structure offer the interior quality without the trade-off. Both options sit within the same $199 starting rate framework and carry the same Michelin Key-level design standard.
    Why do people go to Eastwind?
    The Catskills have re-emerged as a serious destination for New York City-based travelers seeking outdoor access without sacrificing design quality in their lodging. Eastwind specifically attracts guests who have grown skeptical of properties that trade on the idea of design without following through on it. The Michelin Key earned in 2024, combined with a starting rate of $199 per night and a 4.7 rating across 236 Google reviews, signals a property that has built a reputation on consistency rather than novelty. People go because the outdoor recreation infrastructure of the Catskills is genuinely strong, and because the two-hour drive from New York makes it achievable on a long weekend.
    What is the leading way to book Eastwind?
    Given the property's 19-room capacity and the accelerating demand for design-led Catskills lodging, availability compresses quickly around peak weekends. Direct booking is the standard approach. Properties at this scale and in this tier, particularly those with Michelin recognition, tend to hold limited availability for the short-notice window. Planning two to three months ahead for high-season dates is consistent with how comparable small-luxury properties in the Northeast operate. EP Club can assist with availability and planning for guests who have difficulty securing their preferred dates.

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