“Regal French-style château built as a private residence in 1919, now a remarkable and opulent choice for the discerning visitor to Long Island. Interiors are sophisticated with lavish furnishings. European cuisine at the bar and restaurant, gym, in-room massage and wedding/event planning available.”

Recommended for

  • Wedding license

    • OHEKA has a strict policy that any OHEKA Bride has exclusive right to be the only Bride in her wedding gown on the premises.
  • Weddings

    • At OHEKA, brides and grooms can feel like they are getting married in a traditional French chateau by the Loire.
  • Honeymoons

    • With grand staircases, majestic landscaped gardens and exquisite cuisine it is hard to imagine a Happier Ending.
  • Golf

    • Limited privileges to the private, members-only Cold Spring Country Club is available to hotel guests of OHEKA.
  • Grand Hotel

    • Once the second largest private residence in the US and modelled on 18th century French grandeur.
  • Four poster beds

  • Opulent

  • Romantic Break

  • Free wifi

  • Romantic

  • Disabled access

  • Pet friendly

  • Gym

  • Chic

  • Tennis

Facilities

  • Rooms

    32 rooms in this hotel
  • Wedding license

    OHEKA has a strict policy that any OHEKA Bride has exclusive right to be the only Bride in her wedding gown on the premises.
  • Four poster beds

  • Massage

  • Cots available

  • Meeting Room

  • In room DVD

  • Bath robes

  • Safe

  • Free wifi

  • Wifi

  • In room music system

  • Suites

  • Disabled access

  • Pet friendly

  • Gym

Activities

  • Golf

    • Limited privileges to the private, members-only Cold Spring Country Club is available to hotel guests of OHEKA.
  • Tennis

Map & Location

Other reviews

Oheka Castle

OHEKA CASTLE regally stands on a manicured private estate in the heart of Long Island in New York. Influenced by the grandeur of years past, this family-owned castle graciously welcomes guests into a luxurious hotel with historic charm. Built by financier and philanthropist Otto Hermann Kahn in 1919, The New York Times declared it “the finest country estate in America,” and the chateau remains the second-largest private residence ever built in America. In 1984, the estate, then in a dilapidated state, was purchased by the current owner and underwent a painstaking restoration to bring the historic OHEKA CASTLE back to its original opulence.

Originally published by Historic Hotels of America

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