| NYC Highlights |
The most beguiling city in the world, New York is an
adrenaline-charged, history-laden place that holds immense romantic
appeal for visitors. Wandering the streets here, you'll cut between
buildings that are icons to the modern age - and whether gazing at the
flickering lights of the midtown skyscrapers as you speed across the
Queensboro bridge, experiencing the 4am half-life downtown, or just
wasting the morning on the Staten Island ferry, you really would have
to be made of stone not to be moved by it all. There's no place quite
like it.
You could spend weeks in New York and still barely scratch the surface,
but there are some key attractions - and some pleasures - that you
won't want to miss. There are the different ethnic neighborhoods , like lower Manhattan's Chinatown
and the traditionally Jewish Lower East Side (not so much anymore); and
the more artsy concentrations of SoHo, TriBeCa, and the East and West
Villages. Of course, there is the celebrated architecture
of corporate Manhattan, with the skyscrapers in downtown and midtown forming the most indelible images.
Offshore,
the Statue of Liberty
and
Ellis Island
comprise the first section of New York (and America) that most nineteenth-century immigrants would have seen. The
Financial District
takes in the skyscrapers and historic buildings of Manhattan's southern
reaches and was hardest hit by the destruction of perhaps its most
famous landmarks, the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center. Just
northeast is the area around City Hall
, New York's well-appointed municipal center, which adjoins
TriBeCa
, known for its swanky restaurants, galleries, and nightlife. Moving east,
Chinatown
is Manhattan's most populous ethnic neighborhood, a vibrant locale that's great for food and shopping. Nearby,
Little Italy
bears few traces of the once-strong immigrant presence, while the
Lower East Side
, the city's traditional gateway neighborhood for new immigrants, is
nowadays scattered with trendy bars and clubs. To the west, SoHo is one of the premier districts for galleries and the
commercial art scene, not to mention designer shopping. Continuing
north, the West
and
East Villages
form a focus of bars, restaurants, and shops catering to students and would-be bohemians - and of course tourists.
Chelsea
is a largely residential neighborhood that is now mostly known for its
gay scene and art galleries that borders on Manhattan's old Garment District
.
Murray Hill
contains the city's largest skyscraper and most enduring symbol, the
Empire State Building
.
Beyond 42nd Street , the main east-west artery of midtown, the character of the city changes quite radically, and the skyline becomes more high-rise and home to some of New York's most awe-inspiring, neck-cricking architecture. There are also some superb museums and the city's best shopping as you work your way north up Fifth Avenue as far as 59th Street. Here, the classic Manhattan vistas are broken by the broad expanse of Central Park , a supreme piece of nineteenth-century landscaping, without which life in Manhattan would be unthinkable. Flanking the park, the mostly residential and fairly affluent Upper West Side boasts Lincoln Center, Manhattan's temple to the performing arts, the American Museum of Natural History, and Riverside Park along the Hudson River. On the other side of the park, the Upper East Side is wealthier and more grandiose, with its nineteenth-century millionaires' mansions now transformed into a string of magnificent museums known as the "Museum Mile," the most prominent being the vast Metropolitan Museum of Art . Alongside is a patrician residential neighborhood that boasts some of the swankiest addresses in Manhattan, and a nest of designer shopping along Madison Avenue in the seventies. Immediately above Central Park, Harlem , the historic black city-within-a-city, has a healthy sense of an improving go-ahead community; a jaunt further north is most likely required only to see the unusual Cloisters, a nineteenth-century mock-up of a medieval monastery, packed with great European Romanesque and Gothic art and (transplanted) architecture. |