Travel

This small town in Amish Country is the new Brooklyn

Shoppers stroll Lancaster County.Alamy Stock Photo

Forget the Hudson Valley. New Yorkers looking for a quiet respite from city life without sacrificing culture, design and a rich culinary scene should look further west, to Lancaster, Pa., to wile away a weekend.

Just a three-hour Amtrak ride from Penn Station, past the horse-drawn buggies and carriages of the Pennsylvania Dutch, downtown Lancaster doesn’t resemble its Amish surroundings so much as it does a mini-Brooklyn: teeming with art galleries, indie boutiques and restaurants, without the pretensions of the Big Apple.

“I am obsessed,” says Andrea DePablo, a 33-year-old temp from Astoria, Queens, who started visiting the Pennsylvania town a few years ago, when one of her friends started dating an artist who lived there.

“There are so many cute vintage shops and cool boutiques. My friends are trying to convince me to move there, but I am afraid I’m not cool enough!”

You don’t have to go far to encounter that “cool.”

A print at Red Raven.Handout

Just steps from the Lancaster Amtrak station is Gallery Row. This four-block stretch, surrounding downtown’s North Prince Street, has more than 40 independent art purveyors, including the Red Raven Art Company, which draws in collectors from outside the area.

“We are seeing more and more people coming from Philadelphia, Washington, New York City,” says Lee Lovett, gallery manager at Red Raven, who adds that big city dealers began visiting the gallery during the economic collapse to scope out new artists for more affordable prices.

Even with the art-market rebound, she says, dealers still come every month to see the new works on display, which sell for between $5,000 and $20,000.

If design is more your thing, check out Mio Studio, where New York City transplants Mai Orama Muñiz and Erica Millner — whose sculptural, Calder-esque jewelry has been exhibited at the Smithsonian, among other museums — sell wooden bangles and wiry chokers for $100 to $900.

North Queen Street, meanwhile, is bursting with antique and vintage boutiques, including midcentury mecca Space, where you can find a modernist George Nakashima-looking coffee table or the occasional silver-plate deco teapot for a couple Benjamins.

Burgers and beers at Horse Inn.Jennifer Foster/Industrial Resolution.

The best thing, however, is the food. Young chefs are coming to the city in droves, opening new spots such as BYOB French bistro Citronnelle and wood-fire-oven Italian joint Luca. For a bit of old Lancaster, visit the Pressroom, next door to Lancaster’s still-functioning daily paper, or hot spot Horse Inn, a horse stable turned speakeasy turned gastropub, which serves craft cocktails and locally sourced cuisine, including free-range poached buttermilk chicken breast, homey tenderloin tips on toast (a regional delicacy) and house-made ice cream in wild flavors like spirulina-granola.

Suspender-clad bartenders serving drinks, punk music blaring from a vintage jukebox and old Buster Keaton movies flickering silently on the dining room’s brick wall make you feel like you’ve never left Brooklyn.

Get into Lancaster’s artisanal, formerly industrial vibe by checking into the Cork Factory Hotel in the village’s downtown.

The bar at the Cork Factory Hotel. Lauren Fisher Photography

As its name suggests, the 93-room property is set in a former 19th-century cork factory and still retains its historic brick and stone walls as well as wood-beamed ceilings (from about $200/night).

“All these things that are trending in other places, like New York and LA, are a natural way of life here,” says Frankie Kirchgessner, the 36-year-old owner of tattoo parlor No Heroes. Many locals call him the “unofficial mayor” of Lancaster.

He recommends staying overnight at the Lancaster Arts Hotel (from $199/night), located inside a former tobacco and paper goods factory, which also features original works by local Pennsylvania artists.)

“We’ve been doing farm-to-table forever; we’ve been doing old-school traditional furniture forever,” Kirchgessner continues. “It feels like every weekend we have people from out of town staying at our house. It’s a punk-rock kind of city.”