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Looking for something to do in New York and the Tri State area?
Click here for a list of area
attractions and things to do in New York.
 
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American Museum of Natural History
- The American Museum of Natural History, in Midtown Manhattan, offers
permanent and changing exhibits covering Asian, American Indian, Pacific
islanders, South American, Aztec and Mayan cultures. It also features one of
the world’s largest fossils displays, including a Tyrannosaurus Rex and
Apatosaurus, plus other exhibits ranging from human body to animals and
minerals.
Central Park West at 79th Street. (212) 769-5100
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- Apollo Theater
- A major entertainment landmark, Harlem's Apollo Theater was originally
known as Hurtig & Seamon's New (Burlesque) Theater, with vaudeville and
burlesque for white audiences. In 1934, Frank Schiffman, a white
entrepreneur, started showcasing leading black entertainers for mixed
audiences, putting the Apollo forever on the map. Legends such as Billie
Holiday, Duke Ellington, and Dinah Washington played the Apollo, where
amateur nights jump-started careers for Pearl Bailey, James Brown, and
Gladys Knight. Wednesday is amateur night. Back-stage
tours, in groups of up to 20
take place daily, linking past, present and future. Gift shop merchandise
includes vintage Apollo items.
253 West 125th Street, near Frederick Douglass Boulevard. (212) 749-5838
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- Bronx Magnetism
- As for the Bronx, some say how Swede it is, since it was settled in 1639
and named for the Swedish settler Jonas Bronck. More than 60 landmarks and
historic districts are in the Bronx, including the Edgar Allen Poe Cottage
on the Grand Concourse and the Van Cortlandt Mansion and Museum in Van
Cortlandt Park. Wave Hill, a former private estate once home to Mark Twain
and Theodore Roosevelt, among others, has spectacular views overlooking the
Hudson River and New Jersey’s soaring 500-foot cliffs, the Palisades. Its
28-acres, given to the city for use as a public garden, also has wooded
paths, herb and flower gardens, and benches for contemplation. The Bronx
Zoo/Wildlife Conservation Park show cases more than 600 species indoor in
indoor/outdoor environments.
Bronx Zoo, Fordham Road, off the Bronx River Parkway. (718) 367-1010
Edgar Allen Poe Cottage, Poe Park, 2460 Grand Concourse. (718) 881-8900
Van Cortlandt Mansion and Museum, Broadway at 246th Street, Van Cortlandt
Park, Riverdale. (718) 543-3344
Wave Hill, 675 West 252nd Street. (718) 549-3200
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Brooklyn Children’s Museum
- Open since 1899, Brooklyn Children’s Museum is the world’s first for
youngsters, with nearly 27,000 cultural objects and natural history
specimens. The Museum's first home was in Adams Building, a Victorian
mansion in Brooklyn’s
Bedford Park, in 1923 renamed
Brower Park. Parlor rooms and halls held exhibits, with workshops and a
library upstairs. Youngsters were encouraged to participate, not just look.
Driving force Anna Billings Gallup becoming curator in 1904, and invented
ways for children to use the Museum. During the 1930s Depression, federal
WPA workers made improvements, while the Museum expanded its take-home
program, now called the Portable Collections. After WWII, the BCM helped
children prepare for the "space age." By 1967, the expanded BCM’s Adams and
Smith mansions were deemed beyond repair. Temporary space, called “The
Muse,” in a renovated pool hall and auto showroom opened in 1968, leading to
experiments with dance and music classes. In 1977, BCM's Brower Park
building opened on the Smith mansion site with other building structures
recycled into the architecture. Visitors enter through a trolley kiosk from
the 1900's. A "People Tube" -- a huge sewer pipe -- connects four exhibit
floors, and a corn oil tank serves as "The Tank" -- an amphitheater.
45 Brooklyn Avenue, at St. Marks Avenue. (718) 735-4400
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Bryant Park
- A park since 1842, Bryant Park’s midtown location – one block from Times
Square – is a big lunch hour destination in warm weather, typically hosting
more than 5,000 workers on a football field-sized lawn. Amenities include a
French-style carousel (mid-park on 40th Street), chess tables, free yoga
classes, 25,000 varieties of flowers, and free wireless access. Bryant Park
provides multiple venues for year-round events and gatherings. Six flower
beds border Bryant Park’s lawn to the north and south—three on the shady
south side and three on the sunny north. Along the northern and southern
sides are twin promenades bordered by London plane trees (Platanus
acerifolia), the same species found at the Jardin des Tuileries in Paris,
and contributing to Bryant Park’s European aura.
Behind New York Public Library between 40th and 42nd streets.
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Carnegie Hall
- Since Walter Damrosch conducted the first "Young People's Concert" in
1891, Carnegie Hall has taught all ages about music. Each season includes
concerts for families, workshops for teachers and musicians, programs for
students and schools, and free concerts in NYC neighborhoods. One-hour
backstage tours, (212) 903-9765, detail the story of Andrew and Louise
Carnegie and how the Hall was saved from demolition in 1960. Carnegie's
century-long performance tradition showcased artists from Tchaikovsky to
Mahler, from Horowitz to Callas to Bernstein, Judy Garland and
the
Beatles. Gift shop merchandise
strikes a chord celebrating the Hall's 111-year-plus history.
Corner of 57th Street and Seventh Avenue. (212) 247-7800
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Central Park
- Designed in 1858 by Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux, envisioning
a wooded urban oasis from treeless, rocky terrain and stagnant swampland,
Central Park is New York City’s backyard -- a place where people of all
social and ethnic backgrounds mingle. The 843-acre Central Park, covering
six percent of Manhattan, has more than 26,000 trees, 58 miles of scenic
paths, and nearly 9,000 benches on 843 acres. Attracting 25 million people a
year, it also houses the
Central Park Zoo and Wildlife Center, lakes, boathouse, sports
facilities and entertainment. Four visitor centers are: Belvedere Castle, a
19th century stone castle and home to the Henry Luce Nature Observatory; The
Dairy Visitor Center and Gift Shop, in a Victorian building with a reference
library; Charles A. Dana Discovery Center, with hands-on exhibits; and North
Meadow Recreation center, with indoor/outdoor climbing walls, basketball and
handball courts. At least eight different free, volunteer-led
walking
tours are sponsored by the
Central Park Conservancy, (212) 360-2726.
Belvedere Castle, mid-park at 79th Street. (212) 772-0210
The Dairy at Central Park, Mid-Park at 65th Street. (212) 794-6567
Charles A. Dana Discovery Center, 110th Street and Lenox Avenue. (212)
860-1370
North Meadow Recreation Center, mid-park at 97th Street. (212) 348-4867
- Cheapies and Freebies
- New York City has hundreds of no-cost or low-cost pleasures from
concerts, plays, and museums to TV show tapings, and tours throughout the
five boroughs. For a start on cheapies and freebies, drop by NYC’s Official
Visitor Information Center at 810 Seventh Avenue at 53rd Street, the City
Hall Park Visitor Information Kiosk downtown at the southern tip of City
Hall Park, or the Harlem Visitor Information Kiosk uptown at the State
Office Building plaza at 163 West 125th Street and Adam Clayton Powell Jr.
Boulevard. Awaiting are hundreds of brochures and expert, multilingual
visitor counselors to advise on all things New York.
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- Chelsea Piers
- Saved from being paved over by a failed highway project, historic
Chelsea Piers has emerged into a $120 million privately financed 30-plus
acre
waterfront sports-entertainment
complex housing a golf driving range, ice- and roller-skating, bowling, and
a health club. With the
Statue of Liberty National Monument as part
of the panorama, four once-neglected piers – 59, 60, 61, and 62 – also have
shops and restaurants. Luxury liners of yesteryear once departed from the
Piers amid hoopla and champagne. In 1910, the Chelsea Piers debuted with
speeches noting eight-years of construction after three decades of talk. In
1907, even before the Piers were done, the Lusitania and Mauretania docked
there. For the next 50 years, Chelsea Piers was the city's premier passenger
ship terminal, an embarkation point for WWI and WWII soldiers, and finally,
a cargo terminal. Obsolescence struck with jets and container ships
requiring facilities Manhattan could never provide. Redevelopment of the
four surviving Chelsea Piers brings to mind the days when the famed White
Star and
Cunard
lines, with as many as 20 stacks
in view, prepared to sail. As the high and mighty disembarked, so did
immigrants from steerage below, by 1910 arriving daily by the thousands.
Most ships came first to Chelsea Piers, before transferring to ferries bound
for Ellis Island and freedom.
Golf Club, Pier 59. (212) 336-6400
Sports Center, Pier 60. (212) 336-6000
Sky Rink, Ice Hockey, Pier 61. (212) 336-6100
Roller Rink, Field House, Pier 62. (212) 336-6500, (212) 336-6200
- Chinatown and Civic Center
- In Lower Manhattan adjacent to the Civic Center, New York City's
Chinatown, a packed neighborhood still growing rapidly, is the largest
Chinatown in the U.S., with the largest concentration of Chinese in the
western hemisphere! Both a
tourist
attraction and the home of the
majority of Chinese New Yorkers, Chinatown has hundreds of restaurants
(especially on Mott, Pell and Doyers streets), booming fruit and fish
markets, and shops for knickknacks and sweets on winding, crowded streets.
The Civic Center, anchored by City Hall, is a landmark building which has
been the seat of City government for 186 years. The Museum of Chinese in the
Americas (MoCa) has exhibits of national scope.
Museum of Chinese in the Americas, 70 Mulberry Street at Bayard. (212)
619-4785
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Chrysler Building
- Built for auto tycoon Walter Chrysler in “Style Moderne,” the building
exemplifies the machine age in architecture, symbolic of 1920s New York. In
the summer of 1929, Chrysler was battling Wall Street’s Bank of Manhattan
Trust Company for the title of world's tallest building. In spring, 1930,
just when it looked like the bank would prevail for the coveted title,
Chrysler’s crew jacked a needle-thin spire through the top of the crown to
claim the title of world's tallest at 1,046 feet. Since Chrysler wanted not
only the world's tallest structure, but also a bold structure, he decorated
his skyscraper with hubcaps, mudguards, and hood ornaments, just like his
cars, hoping such a distinctive building would make his car company a
household name. The Chrysler Building is now recognized as New York City's
greatest display of Art Deco, characterized by sharp angular or zigzag
surface forms and ornaments. Four months after completion of the Chrysler
Building, the new
Empire State Building claimed title of the
world’s tallest.
405 Lexington Avenue. The Cloisters The Cloisters, in upper Manhattan, is a
branch of the
Metropolitan Museum of Art including parts
of five French cloisters, a Romanesque chapel, and gardens. Fort Tryton
Park. (212) 937-3700.
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Cooper-Hewitt -
National Design Museum
- Housed in the Andrew Carnegie mansion and considered the design
authority of the United States,
Cooper-Hewitt - National Design Museum, a
part of the Smithsonian Institution, is the nation’s only museum devoted
exclusively to historic and contemporary design. Holdings encompass diverse,
comprehensive collections of design works, tracing history of design through
more than 250,000 objects spanning 23 centuries from the Han Dynasty (200
B.C.) to the present. Special strengths of the library include a
6,500-volume rare book collection and a world's fair collection containing
more than 1,000 items from guides to ephemera.
Corner of Fifth Avenue and 91st Street. (212) 839-8351.
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- Ellis Island
- Lower Manhattan’s Ellis Island, point of entry to millions of immigrants
from 1892 to 1924, has exhibits relating the history of the processing
station. Among immigrants passing through and going on to illustrious
careers are: Irving Berlin, musician, arrived in 1893 from Russia; Marcus
Garvey, politician, arrived 1916 from Jamaica; Bob Hope, comedian, arrived
in 1908 from England; Knute Rockne, football coach, arrived in 1893 from
Norway; and the von Trapp
family of "Sound of Music" fame, arrived in 1938 from Austria.
New York Harbor, near
Statue of Liberty National Monument. (212)
269-5755.
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Empire State Building
- Midtown’s famed Empire State Building, at 1,454 feet tall, was built in
1931 in Art Deco style with 2 million square feet of office space and an
observation tower on the 102nd floor. Construction took one year and 45 days
including Sundays and holidays with 7 million man hours. The cost
($24,718,000) was halved by onset of the Depression, with the total cost
ending at $40,948,900, including land. The observation area is open 365 days
from 9:30 a.m. to midnight, with the last elevator heading up at 11:15 p.m.
350 Fifth Avenue at 34th Street. (212) 736-3100
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- Fashion Flair
- Informing and inspiring clothes horses, New York’s Fashion Institute of
Technology (FIT) shows off thousands of designer costumes, accessories,
fabrics and the work of renowned fashion photographers in the Institute’s
free museum. Dedicated to documentation of fashion and style for all levels
of society, the museum interprets design from magnificent Balenciagas to
sturdy denim within social and cultural contexts. For a fashion update,
Macy’s group tour, at $10 per person, discusses the history of the world’s
largest department store, from 1857 beginnings to its status today with more
than two million square feet of selling space.
Fashion Institute of Technology, Seventh Avenue at 27th Street. (212)
217-5800
Macy’s, 151 West 34th Street, Visitor Center on 34th Street Balcony. (212)
695-4400
- Flatiron Building
- The triangular shape of the Flatiron Building (an early skyscraper)
produced wind currents that made women’s skirts billow, spurring police to
create the term “23 skiddoo” when shooing away gawkers assembling for the
show. The building apex, just six feet wide, expands into a limestone wedge
adorned with Gothic and Renaissance details of Greek faces and terra cotta
flowers.
175 Fifth Avenue, between 22nd and 23rd streets.
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- Grant’s Tomb
- Ulysses S. Grant, Civil War general and two-term U.S. president, rests
beside his wife Julia in the largest mausoleum in the U.S. The two grand
sarcophagi are modeled after Napoleon's tomb in Les Invalides in Paris. The
white granite mausoleum overlooking the Hudson River and Riverside park was
completed in 1897, and also displays Grant memorabilia and Civil War
artifacts. More than one million people attended the parade and dedication
ceremony of Grant's Tomb, on April 27, 1897. Admission is free.
122nd Street and Riverside Drive. (212) 666-1640
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- Green-Wood Cemetery
- Brooklyn’s Green-Wood Cemetery, an “outdoor museum” filled with
extraordinary works of sculpture and architecture, is home to graves of
national figures including musical great Leonard Bernstein, artist Louis
Comfort Tiffany, newspaperman Horace Greeley and William “Bill the Butcher”
Poole, the 19th-century gang leader depicted in Martin Scorsese’s film Gangs
of New York. The cemetery conducts regular public tours year-round for $10.
Self-guided walking tours are also available.
500 25th Street, Brooklyn. (718) 788-7850
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Greenwich
Village
- Lower Manhattan’s Greenwich Villages, east, central, and west, are long
the focal point of New York's artistic and literary life, and a popular
visitor attraction with lively street activity in and around historic
Washington Square.
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Ground Zero Museum Workshop
- Daily interactive, hands-on tours of the future site of the Ground Zero
Museum, located about an 8-minute cab or subway ride from the Ground Zero
site, including the Gary Marlon Suson collection of photographs illustrating
recovery efforts, and artifacts recovered from the remains of the 9/11
attack, are given every day in English, French, Spanish and Italian, located
in Manhattan's Meat Packing District. Tours are 90 minutes in length, and
advance purchase of tickets is required.
420 West 14th Street, 2nd Floor (between 9th Avenue and Washington Street),
Manhattan. (212) 209-3370
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- Inside CNN
- Tracing the history of journalism and the CNN news gathering process
with insight on how control rooms operate, Inside CNN provides guided
45-minute tours departing every 10 minutes, at the Time Warner Center.
10 Columbus Circle, near southwest corner of Central Park, between West 58th
and 60th Streets. (866) 4-CNN-NYC.
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Jacques Marchais Museum of Tibetan Art
- Built to resemble a small Himalayan Temple, the Jacques Marchais Museum
of Tibetan Art is one of only two Himalayan-style, monastery buildings in
the Western world and is the only one in the U.S. An intricate altar within
this little known treasure was blessed by H.H. the Dalai Lama in 1991. The
museum collection includes Tsong Khapa (1357-1410) in unbaked, painted clay
from the 14th century and Shakyamuni Buddha, in gilded metal alloy from 18th
century China. Also on grounds are meditation gardens, and a pond for lotus
and fish. The museum’s gift shop stocks items handmade by Tibetans living in
exile, along with fine art reproductions, jewelry, mysterious ritual
objects, unusual books, sacred music CDs, incense and many exotic,
one-of-a-kind items. Events and programs throughout the year include the
annual Tibetan Rug Bazaar, a Walking Meditation Series, and a Tibetan
Festival with henna body painting. In a residential neighborhood, museum
parking is limited and visitors are asked to guard against blocking
driveways. Hours throughout the year are Wednesday to Sunday from 1 to 5
p.m. Admission is free for members, $5 for adults, and $3 for
seniors/students.
338 Lighthouse Avenue, Staten Island. (718) 987-3500
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- Jewish Museum
- The Jewish Museum, in Upper Manhattan, is the largest such museum in the
world outside Israel, with exhibitions covering 4,000 years of Jewish art,
history and culture.
1109 Fifth Avenue at 92nd Street. (212) 423-3200
- Little Italy
- Little Italy in Lower Manhattan, and the place to buy Italian cheeses,
sausages and breads, is an excellent place for immersion into Old World
atmosphere. In summer, al fresco dining on Mulberry Street is reminiscent of
an evening in Naples or Rome.
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Long Island Vineland Tour
- Tour the vineyards and taste the wines produced at the east end of Long
Island, in limousines and party buses with a variety of packages available.
111 Albany Avenue, Freeport. (718) 946-3868
- Madame Tussauds New York
- In Times Square, Madame Tussauds provides schmooze opportunity with
famed personas, where visitors can stand beside life-like replicas of
A-listers, icons, world leaders, and politicians. Interactive action
includes Sing for Simon on American Idol and Chamber of Horrors, Madame’s
scariest exhibit.
234 West 42nd Street, between Seventh and Eighth avenues. (212) 512-9600,
(800) 246-8872
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Madison Square Garden
- Madison Square Garden, on Seventh Avenue between 31st and 33rd streets,
has long been the venue for things memorable, from the NFL Draft, CBS
Television's Fall Premiere, Con Edison's Shareholder Meetings, Product
Launches for Intel, presidential birthday fetes including when Marilyn
Monroe sang happy birthday to JFK, and religious conferences. The
Madison Square Garden Theater is home to
the timeless holiday classic, A Christmas Carol.
4 Pennsylvania Plaza, New York. (212) 307-7171
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Metropolitan Museum of Art
- The Metropolitan Museum of Art, one of the world’s great museums,
features Egyptian, Greek and Roman art collections, as well as European and
Oriental paintings and sculptures, antiques, plus other art forms from
around the globe.
Fifth Avenue and 81st Street. (212) 570-3711
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- Museum of American Financial History
- Tracing growth, opportunity and entrepreneurship, the Museum of
Financial History, showcases Wall Street activity, the role of capital
markets as engines of progress, and American business achievements. The
Museum occupies the site of Alexander Hamilton's law office and the former
headquarters of John D. Rockefeller's Standard Oil Company, directly
opposite the famous "Charging Bull" statue. Collection items include ticker
tape from the 1929 crash, a working model stock ticker, and the earliest
photograph of Wall Street. As the 35th affiliate of the Smithsonian
Institution, the museum’s message is how a democratic free market economy
creates growth and opportunity -- the story of the American dream. The
Museum serves as a good starting point for visits to the Financial District.
28 Broadway. (212) 908-4609
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- Museum
of Modern Art
- The Museum of Modern Art in Midtown Manhattan displays 20th century
paintings, sculptures, drawings, and more.
11 West 53rd Street. (212) 708-9480
- New York Boat Brunch Cruises
- On Sundays from noon to 2 p.m., mid-July through October, The 85-foot
Festiva, accommodating up to 100, does New Orleans-style Sunday brunch
cruises to George Washington Bridge. Brunch, catered by Sylvia’s Restaurant
of Harlem, includes one complimentary beverage, plus fried chicken, baked
ham, collards, macaroni and cheese, and more. Cost: $50 for adults, $25 for
under age 7. Other cruise charter options are available.
79th Street Boat Basin, A-dock, New York, New York. (212) 496-8625 or (888)
755-BOAT.
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- New York Botanical Garden and
Brooklyn Botanic Garden
- The New York Botanical Garden is home to the nation’s largest Victorian
glasshouse, the Enid A. Haupt Conservatory, a New York City landmark that
has showcased NYBG’s distinguished tropical, Mediterranean, and desert plant
collections since 1902. At the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, tours, concerts,
dance performances, and symposia are always on the roster, as well as
special one-time events featuring elements of the Garden at their peak. Each
spring, BBG celebrates the flowering of the Japanese cherry trees with our
annual Sakura Matsuri (Cherry Blossom Festival), and each fall is spiced up
with a multicultural Chile Pepper Fiesta!
New York Botanical Garden, 200th Street and Southern Boulevard. (718)
817-8700
Brooklyn Botanic Garden, 1000 Washington
Avenue. (718) 623-7200
- New York City Police Museum
- From Colonial beginnings to official establishment in 1845 to the
present, the New York City Police Museum, in historic Lower Manhattan,
captures the rich history of the New York Police Department (NYPD),
providing abundant insider glimpses. Permanent exhibits include
turn-of-the-century mug shots, photos of notorious criminals and “tools of
the trade,” a display of police vehicles, and a model of a jail cell. The
museum also pays tribute to every NYPD officer killed in the line of duty
throughout departmental history.
100 Old Slip. (212) 480-3100
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- The New York Public Library
- Origins of the New York Public Library, housing more than six million
volumes, date to when one-time governor Samuel J. Tilden (1814-1886)
bequeathed most of his fortune -- about $2.4 million -- to establish and
maintain a free library and reading room. New York already had the Astor and
Lenox libraries, the Astor created through John Jacob Astor (1763-1848), a
German immigrant who became the wealthiest man in America and left $400,000
for a reference library. James Lenox left his personal collection of rare
books (including the first Gutenberg Bible to come to the New World), but it
was intended for bibliophiles and scholars. By 1892, both the Astor and
Lenox libraries were in financial straits, and a plan was devised to
consolidate Astor, Lenox, and Tilden resources to form The New York Public
Library. The system now includes 85 libraries, with collections totaling 6.6
million items, providing free information on a scale unmatched by any other
institution. In 1995, The New York Public Library celebrated the centennial
of its founding. One-hour building tours of the landmark facility begin at
11 a.m. and 2 p.m, with groups of 10 or more by appointment..
42nd Street and Fifth Avenue. (212) 930-0800.
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- New York Skyride
- New York Skyride, in Midtown Manhattan, consists of two 40-seat big
screen flight simulator theaters, featuring a wild ride over Manhattan's
skyline.
Empire State Building, second floor. (212) 279-9777
- New York Stock Exchange
- Lower Manhattan’s New York Stock has a visitor's gallery and self-guided
tours. A tree outside symbolizes the buttonwood where traders once gathered
to exchange stocks. 20 Broad Street. (212) 656-3000.
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Radio City Music Hall
- Upon the 1929 market crash, John D. Rockefeller, Jr. held a $91 million,
24-year lease on a midtown Manhattan tract in the “speakeasy belt" with
plans dashed for a new
Metropolitan Opera House. Rockefeller
boldly decided to build an entire complex targeting commercial tenants,
although Manhattan was awash in vacancy and despair. Partnering with
fledgling Radio Corporation of America, whose NBC radio and RKO studios
boomed despite bad times, Rockefeller also brought in S.L. "Roxy" Rothafel,
a theatrical genius using razzle-dazzle décor to revive struggling theaters
across America. Resulting was a theater unlike any other within the "Radio
City" part of the
Rockefeller Center complex. Radio City
Music Hall, a palace for the people with quality entertainment at ordinary
prices, has since attracted more than 300 million for shows, movies, and
special events. It still looms large, and over 75 years its Radio City
Rockettes have kicked their way into icon status. The restored Music Hall
reflects original grandeur of opening night, 1932, with behind-the-scenes
upgrades. Stage Door Tour guests explore the Great Stage and its ‘30s
vintage hydraulic system. See Roxy’s renowned private suite with 12-feet
high gold leaf ceilings, and meet a Rockette. One-hour walking tours depart
from the Music Hall lobby.
1260 Avenue of the Americas, Sixth Avenue and 50th Street. (212) 307-7171
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Rockefeller Center
- Rockefeller Center, with 24 acres of underground shops, changed the form
of Midtown Manhattan, becoming one of the most successful urban planning
projects in history. The vast project provided thousands of jobs during the
Depression and restored the image of New York as the premier American city.
Rockefeller Center is an art deco marvel consisting of 19 commercial
buildings covering 11 acres from 49th to 52nd Streets, Fifth to Seventh
Avenues. Thirty Rockefeller Plaza, the RCA headquarters, was the largest and
first built, and stands as the centerpiece, and now General Electric’s
initials brighten the rooftop for the home of NBC. Hour-long studio tours
include production areas of various TV shows. The NBC Store also has
souvenirs from shows such as "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno," "Late Night
with Conan O'Brien" and "Saturday Night Live."
Bounded by Fifth Avenue, 48th Street, Sevenue Avenue and West 51st Street.
(212) 664-4000
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- St. Patrick’s Cathedral
- St. Patrick's Cathedral, one of the nation’s largest houses of worship,
is in Midtown Manhattan with seating for 2,400, and a pipe organ with more
than 7,380 pipes. Fifth Avenue at 50th Street. (212) 753-2261
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Shea Stadium
- Home of the New York Mets, Queen’s Shea Stadium was originally to be
called Flushing Meadow Park. It ended up named after William Alfred Shea, an
attorney instrumental in acquiring a new team after the departure of the
Giants and Dodgers. Proximity to LaGuardia Airport makes Shea Stadium the
noisiest outdoor ballpark in the Majors. Site selection was done in winter,
according to lore, when flight paths were different than during baseball
season. When a Met hits a homer at Shea, a red Big Apple rises out of a
black top hat, although some say it looks more like a big kettle.
123-01 Roosevelt Avenue. (718) 507-METS
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SoHo and TriBeCa
- Within a quarter of a square mile, SoHo has roughly 250 art galleries,
four museums, nearly 200 restaurants, and 100 stores. Blocks south of
Houston (pronounced HOW-ston) and north of Canal streets are home to the
city's largest concentration of cast-iron fronted buildings, built as
warehouses and manufacturing spaces, but converted to living spaces, called
lofts, for artists and sculptors who appreciated the larger spaces. These
19th-century architectural gems (often Victorian Gothic, Italianiate, and
neo-Grecian), prized by preservationists, are now home to the better-heeled.
When SoHo became too upscale for starving artists, many moved further
downtown to another then half-abandoned industrial district, TriBeCa (the
Triangle Below Canal), which has since become a hot destination, most
notably for dining. One TriBeCa frontrunner, actor Robert De Niro, has lived
and worked in the neighborhood for some 20 years.
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South Street Seaport
- Experience New York’s salty maritime history at the South Street
Seaport, boasting a museum and numerous shops and restaurants. Browsing is
free; museum admission is $5 for adults and free for children under 12.
South Street Historic District near Water and Beekman Streets. (212)
748-8600
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Staten Island Ferry
- For Manhattan skyline spectacle, take the Staten Island Ferry from New
York harbor. The ferry runs 24 hours a day and is free at all times.
(Vehicle fare is $3.) Big facelifts set for 2004 wrap-up are underway at the
St. George and Whitehall Ferry Terminals, to serve more than 65,000 daily
riders with enhanced dining and an outdoor promenade easing pedestrian
access between Bay Street and the terminal.
St. George Ferry Terminal at Richmond Terrace, Staten Island. (718) 815-BOAT
Whitehall Ferry Terminal at Whitehall and
South Streets in Lower Manhattan. (718) 815-BOAT
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Statue of Liberty National Monument
- The Statue of Liberty National Monument, measuring 151 feet on a
154-foot pedestal (with a 35-foot waist and an 8-foot index finger), is the
tallest statue of modern times. France presented the 450,000-pound Lady
Liberty to the U.S. in 1884, commemorating the alliance of the two countries
during the American Revolution. It features the American Museum of
Immigration.
Upper New York Bay on Liberty Island. (212) 363-3200.
- Teddy Roosevelt’s Birthplace National Historic Site
- He remains the only U.S. president born in New York City, yet locals and
visitors alike often unknowingly walk past the brownstone where Theodore
Roosevelt, 26th president of the U.S., was born Oct. 27, 1858. His father’s
success as an importer/exporter meant the house where a frail yet bright
Teddy lived until age 14 had gas lighting, sumptuous furnishings, and a
backyard stretching all the way to 19th Street. The four-story house is
filled with Roosevelt family furniture including T.R.’s child-sized chair by
the library fireplace. Roosevelt, growing up to become a strapping colonel
of the Rough Riders, declined to buy his birth home when plans were
announced to raze it in 1916 for a commercial building. In 1919, the year of
Roosevelt’s death, the Women’s Roosevelt Memorial Association acquired the
site, demolished the new building, and reconstructed his home as a memorial.
Period rooms of the narrow, dark Victorian house are restored to reflect
their 1865-1872 appearance. The National Park Service offers tours.
28 East 20th Street, New York City. (212) 260-1616
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Times Square Visitors Center
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Times Square draws approximately 37 million
visitors spending up to $16.4 billion annually. The Times Square Visitors
Center, in the restored landmark Embassy Movie Theatre, is steps from more
than 5,000 businesses with 250,000 employees, and from world-renowned
landmarks and tourist attractions. Times Square is surrounded by 45 Broadway
theaters, drawing 11.6 million people annually and generating tickets sales
of more than $588 million. Times Square is also the hub of New York’s
hospitality industry, surrounded by 28 hotels, accounting for one-fifth of
all New York City hotel rooms. Free walking tours depart from the Visitors
Center every Friday at noon, rain or shine.
Times Square Visitors Center, 1560
Broadway, between 46th and 47th streets.
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- Tribute – A Celebration of New York City
- Tribute is a performance of the never-ending symphony that is New York
life. In the heart of Tribute is the Remember Experience viewed in one of
two custom-built high definition projection theaters. Visitors also can walk
around the floating multimedia screens and explore artwork from the
underground and emerging artists gallery. The Remember Experience itself
celebrates the beauty and vitality of a city undeterred by tragedy.
Remember, speaking from shadows of two fallen giants, dares telling the New
York story as never before told. Featured are a September 11th Memorial
Hall, a café overlooking historic Bowling Green Park, and a gift shop.
24 Broadway, New York City. (212) 952-1000
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United Nations Headquarters
- United Nations Headquarters, in Midtown Manhattan, offers one-hour tours
departing from the
United Nations Public Lobby daily covering
the Secretariat Building, the domed General Assembly Building, Conference
Building and the Hammarskjold Library. The name "United Nations," coined by
President Franklin D. Roosevelt, was first used in the "Declaration by
United Nations" of Jan. 1. 1942, during WW11, when representatives of 26
nations pledged to continue fighting together against the Axis Powers.
United Nations Day is celebrated annually on Oct. 24.
First Avenue and 46th Street. (212) 963-7700
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Yankee Stadium
- Yankee Stadium, known as the house in the Bronx that Babe Ruth built,
opened in 1923 for a capacity of 58,000, and was the first ballpark large
enough to be called a stadium. Bleachers in right center field are sometimes
called Ruthville.
161st Street and River Avenue. (718) 293-6000.
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