
Our Story
About the Genesee Grande

Who We Are
An independent hotel that chose to stay that way
The Genesee Grande Hotel sits at 1060 East Genesee Street in downtown Syracuse, New York. It is one of the few full-service independent hotels left in Central New York, and that independence is not accidental. It is a deliberate choice that shapes everything about how the hotel operates, from the way guests are treated at check-in to the menu at the 1060 Restaurant downstairs.
The hotel was fully renovated in 2003 under the ownership of Norm Swanson, a Syracuse-area developer who has been one of the more thoughtful stewards of downtown hospitality in the city. Swanson also owns the Parkview Hotel and Hotel Skyler on the same stretch of East Genesee Street. Both of those properties eventually affiliated with national brands, Best Western and Hilton's Tapestry Collection respectively. The Genesee Grande did not. It has stayed independent because independence lets it be something a chain property simply cannot be: genuinely local.
That means the staff stays longer. The regular guests are recognized. The 1060 Restaurant feels like a neighborhood restaurant because it is one. And decisions about how the hotel operates are made by people who live in Syracuse, not by a brand standard document written in a corporate office somewhere else.
See Our HistoryOur History
How the Genesee Grande came to be
The Genesee Grande's story is tied directly to the story of downtown Syracuse, a city that has seen a lot of change over the past few decades and kept its character through most of it.
What We Believe In
What makes an independent hotel different
Chain hotels follow brand standards. Independent hotels follow their community. Here is what that actually looks like at the Genesee Grande.
Every decision about how this hotel operates is made by people who live in Syracuse and care about the city. The staff know the neighborhood. The restaurant sources locally. The recommendations guests get are real, not pulled from a brand-approved list of sponsored suggestions.
Independent hotels remember faces. When a family comes back every year for Parents Weekend at Syracuse University, the staff know them. When someone is staying close to a sick family member at Upstate Hospital, the team understands what that stay actually means. That kind of attention is not in any brand standard document.
The 1060 Restaurant draws in local regulars who have nothing to do with the hotel. The ballroom has hosted hundreds of Syracuse weddings. The bar fills up on game days with a mix of guests and neighbors. That is what a hotel that is genuinely part of its community looks like.
Our Neighborhood
East Genesee Street and why it matters
The stretch of East Genesee Street where the Genesee Grande sits is one of the most consequential corridors in downtown Syracuse. It connects the city center to the Syracuse University hill, passes within walking distance of Upstate University Hospital, and runs through a neighborhood that has been central to the city's identity for generations.
Very few hotel locations in any city can claim to be genuinely useful to as many different kinds of travelers as East Genesee Street is. Families visiting SU for move-in weekend or graduation walk to campus. Medical families staying near Upstate Hospital don't need a car. Game day visitors can be at the Carrier Dome in ten minutes on foot.
"The Genesee Grande and Parkview hotels on East Genesee Street are fixtures of the Syracuse hospitality scene that have shaped what downtown looks like for visitors and residents alike."
The hotel is also close to Armory Square, the most active dining and nightlife district in the city, and within easy reach of cultural institutions including the Everson Museum of Art, the Erie Canal Museum, and the Destiny USA shopping complex.

What Sets Us Apart
Six reasons guests keep coming back to the Genesee Grande
Less than a mile from Syracuse University and Upstate University Hospital, minutes from Armory Square, and right on the East Genesee Street corridor that connects everything in downtown Syracuse.
The 1060 Restaurant serves proper meals three times a day and runs a full bar into the evening. It has local regulars. It gets busy on game days because the food is actually good.
The Genesee Grande Ballroom has hosted hundreds of Syracuse weddings. The hotel provides ceremony space, the reception, guest rooms, getting-ready suites, catering, and the afterparty bar — all in one building.
When something needs to happen, it happens. There is no brand approval process, no corporate ticketing system, no waiting for a regional manager to sign off.
The hotel's proximity to Upstate University Hospital has made it a trusted choice for families in difficult circumstances for years. The team understands what those stays require.
The Genesee Grande has the kind of architectural character that takes decades to develop. High ceilings. Real proportions. Spaces that feel like they were built to be impressive rather than efficient.

Our Team
The people behind the Genesee Grande
The Genesee Grande runs on people who have been here long enough to actually know the hotel. That kind of institutional knowledge is rare, and it is one of the things guests notice most.

Oversees the day-to-day operation of the hotel with a focus on guest experience and staff development. Has been part of the Genesee Grande team through multiple phases of the hotel's growth and knows the property inside and out.

The person wedding couples work with from first inquiry to the last dance. Our events team has coordinated hundreds of weddings in the Genesee Grande Ballroom and brings calm, experienced presence to every event.

Leads the kitchen at the 1060 Restaurant with a focus on seasonal ingredients and Central New York sourcing. The menu reflects the region rather than just the hotel, which is what makes the 1060 a place locals choose on its own merits.
In the News
What has been written about the Genesee Grande
"His Parkview and Genesee Grande hotels in Syracuse and Tailwater Lodge in Altmar remain independent, a distinction that sets them apart in a city where most full-service hotels have joined national brands."
"Swanson's Genesee Grande a few blocks up the road is now his only unaffiliated property, and it continues to draw guests who prefer the character and service of an independent hotel."
Listed as a recommended accommodation in downtown Syracuse in multiple language editions of Wikivoyage, the community travel guide used by visitors planning trips to Central New York from around the world.
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