The Drake hotel was demolished in 2007. This is a nice bottle opener used at the hotel bar or offered to certain customers depending on the room they booked. Previous owner guesses this is from the late 80s. Here is a little history about The Drake from Wikipedia:



Silent film star Lillian Gish lived at the hotel from 1946 to 1949. Other notable guests included Frank Sinatra, Muhammad Ali, Judy Garland, Jimi Hendrix and Glenn Gould. Restaurateur Toots Shor lived there in his final years.


The hotel was built in 1926 by the real estate organization of Bing & Bing. It was a 21-floor complex with 495 rooms. According to one source, "it boasted innovations such as automatic refrigeration as well as spacious, luxurious rooms and suites".[1] Fauchon chocolates was located on the ground floor.


The hotel was acquired in the early 1980s by the Swissotel company of Zurich, which renamed it Swissotel The Drake and undertook a $52 million room-by-room renovation of the building. The hotel received positive national exposure, as the syndicated talk show Donahue used the hotel to accommodate the show's guests, in exchange for a mention of it on each episode. Renovations were completed in 1991. In 2006 the hotel was sold for $440 million (equivalent to $580 million in 2021[7]) to developer Harry Macklowe. It was demolished in 2007, and the site became one of New York's most valuable development sites in 2011.[8] In mid-2012, construction began on a 1,398-foot (426 m) residential skyscraper, 432 Park Avenue, on the site.[9] Designed by Rafael Viñoly, the tower topped out in October 2014,[10] becoming the tallest building in New York City by roof height, and the tallest residential building in the Western Hemisphere at the time of its completion.[11]


Vtg “The Drake” Hotel Swissotel New York Aba Screw Corkscrew Bottle Opener Tool.