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Glamping goes urban as New York City retreat opens

NEW YORK 鈥 Just imagine it, a luxurious room on an island, with chef-prepared meals and a view of the Statue of Liberty and the Manhattan skyline. Hotel? Not exactly.
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Collective Retreats tents sit on Governor's Island, with Manhattan in the background.

NEW YORK 鈥 Just imagine it, a luxurious room on an island, with chef-prepared meals and a view of the Statue of Liberty and the Manhattan skyline.

Hotel? Not exactly.

It鈥檚 actually a campground of high-end tents on New York City鈥檚 Governors Island, the latest outpost for glamping, or glamorous camping.

Rates that can run more than $700 US provide such creature comforts as full beds, high thread-count sheets, bathrooms, plush towels, electrical outlets, barbecue grills and an on-site restaurant offering prime cuts of meat.

There isn鈥檛 a leaky tent, musty sleeping bag or can of baked beans in sight.

鈥淲e鈥檝e tried to create an experience where people can put all those concerns aside and connect to the place that they鈥檙e in, the people that they鈥檙e with and themselves,鈥 said Peter Mack, CEO and founder of Collective Retreats, which has developed similar camps in Colorado, Montana and Texas.

Visitors staying in the 27听smaller, journey tents share bathroom facilities. Those staying in the 10 larger, summit tents have their own private, en suite bathrooms, spa robes and even a campfire s鈥檓ores kit.

The location, Governors Island, is a 172-acre plot of land that sits just off the southern tip Manhattan, with stunning views of the city鈥檚 Financial District, the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island.

Formerly used by the U.S. army and coast guard, a portion of it is now home to a national monument overseen by the National Park Service, while the majority was transferred over to the city and state for the benefit and use of the public.

It鈥檚 accessible only by ferry and currently open to the public for six months of the year, which means visitors to Collective Governors Island have specific windows both to plan their stays as well as how they get to and from their tents during a visit.

At night, once the ferries have stopped running, people staying there have to remain within the campgrounds, but in the mornings they have the island to themselves until the boats start operating again.

The goal is to turn the island into a year-round destination, said Michael Samuelian, president and CEO of the Trust for Governors Island, the organization that oversees its redevelopment. To that end, the site hosts events including musical performances and art exhibitions.

Collective Retreats鈥 pitch for a luxury camping ground on a part of the island made perfect sense, he said.

Putting up tents and communal bathrooms requires less infrastructure than building a full-scale hotel, which is on the ultimate-goal list.

But it allows the trust to start having overnight visitors and figure out the transportation and other needs to make it a full-time, year-round destination.

鈥淚t鈥檚 absolutely worth it because, big-picture, this is the direction we need to go,鈥 Samuelian said.