Gran Melia Palacio de los Duques
- Kiwi Curated
- Gran Melia Palacio de los Duques
- Hotel Urban
- Hotel Villa Magna
- Hyatt Regency Hesperia Madrid
- Madrid
- ME Madrid Reina Victoria
- NH Collection Madrid Palacio de Tepa
- NH Collection Madrid Suecia
- Only YOU Boutique Hotel
- Only You Hotel Atocha
- Spain
- The Westin Palace Madrid
Spring in Spain: Madrid
- Kiwi Curated
- 25hours Hotel Hamburg Altes Hafenamt
- Austria
- Brunelleschi Hotel
- Florence
- France
- Germany
- Gran Melia Palacio de los Duques
- Grand Elysee
- Grand Hôtel Stockholm
- Hamburg
- Hotel du Collectionneur Arc de Triomphe
- Italy
- La Pigalle
- London
- Madrid
- New York
- New York City
- Paris
- Sofitel New York
- Spain
- Stockholm
- Sweden
- Tennerhof Gourment & Spa de Charme Hotel
- The Wellesley Knightsbridge
- Tyrol
- United Kingdom
- United States
Majorly Festive Destinations for the Holidays
- Kiwi Curated
- 25hours Hotel Bikini Berlin
- art
- Australia
- Berlin
- California
- Canada
- Das Stue
- England
- Germany
- Gramercy Park
- Gramercy Park Hotel
- Gran Melia Palacio de los Duques
- Hotel Le Crystal
- London
- Los Angeles
- Lyall Hotel and Spa
- Madrid
- Melbourne
- Midtown
- Mondrian Los Angeles
- Montreal
- New York
- New York City
- Only YOU Boutique Hotel
- Palihouse West Hollywood
- Place d’Armes Hotel & Suites
- Quebec
- Sanderson
- Sofitel New York
- Spain
- The Cullen
- The London EDITION
- United Kingdom
- United States
- West Hollywood
The Best Cities for Street Art
As crime and austerity swept through the Big Apple in the early 1970s, New York City’s Mayor John Lindsay took to a podium to declare a “War on Graffiti.” During this time, the city’s subway system was creaking at the seams, barely functioning and covered in graffiti tags from the city’s burgeoning street art scene. Over the coming years, New York City Hall spent an estimated $300 million in an attempt to keep subway trains and stations free of graffiti, forcing artists to work under the cover of darkness while creating ever more elaborate works.