Showing posts with label U.S.-NYC-attractions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label U.S.-NYC-attractions. Show all posts

November 27, 2018

NYC: Rockefeller Center at Christmas; things to do

Rockefeller Center  

600 Fifth Ave. 

Christmas central in NYC seems to be the ice skating rink at Rockefeller Center and its 80-foot-tall tree decorated with 45,000+ lights.  The first Christmas tree was lit here in 1933, and today more than half a million people see it each day.  The Rockettes kick up their heels nearby at Radio City Music Hall, and the big department stores display their magnificent decorated windows along adjacent Fifth Avenue.  And this year FAO Schwarz is making a comeback with a new store here, complete with the famous clock tower and also a giant piano keyboard like the one Tom Hanks played in “Big.”

ice skating rink at Rockefeller Center in NYC
ice skating rink at Rockefeller Center in NYC


ice skating rink and Christmas tree at Rockefeller Center in NYC
ice skating rink and Christmas tree at Rockefeller Center in NYC


More Christmas attractions in NYC.

More things to do in NYC.

December 19, 2017

NYC: 9/11 Memorial and Museum, the Oculus, and One World Trade Center + Brookfield Place; things to do

9/11 Memorial and Museum  

180 Greenwich St.  $24, 65+ $18, 7-17 $15.  Memorial:  Daily 7:30am-9pm.  Museum:  Sun-Thu 9am-8pm, F-Sat 9am-9pm. 

The World Trade Center built here in 1987 consisted of the two tallest buildings in the world.  This new 9/11 Memorial and Museum was built here at "Ground Zero"--as it became known after the attacks--to honor the thousands of people killed here in the terror attacks of September 11, 2001, when these buildings were demolished by terrorist attacks in 2001.  Each of the Memorial’s twin reflecting pools sits within an original footprint of the Twin Towers and measures almost an acre, and they feature the largest manmade waterfalls in North America.  The name of each person who died in the attacks here are inscribed into bronze panels lining the top edge of the Memorial pools.  A related museum is built underneath the plaza.  
 
9/11 Memorial in NYC
9/11 Memorial in NYC


waterfall at 9/11 Memorial in NYC
waterfall at 9/11 Memorial in NYC


inscribed names at 9/11 Memorial in NYC
inscribed names at 9/11 Memorial in NYC


The glass-and-steel Oculus designed by Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava to resemble a white dove in flight is white inside and out.  It is now the third largest train station in New York City, after the Grand Central Terminal and Pennsylvania Station.  This transport hub connects the PATH station and 1 New York City Transit Authority subway train to the ferry terminal, the World Financial Center, and One World Trade Center on the west, and to the 2 3 4 5 A C J Z N R W New York City Transit Authority subway trains through the Fulton Center on the East.  The roof opens one day each year, when it provides a view of the World Trade Center.

exterior of Oculus at 9/11 Memorial in NYC
exterior of Oculus at 9/11 Memorial in NYC


interior of Oculus at 9/11 Memorial in NYC
interior of Oculus at 9/11 Memorial in NYC


transportation hub in interior of Oculus at 9/11 Memorial in NYC
transportation hub in interior of Oculus at 9/11 Memorial in NYC


The Westfield World Trade Center shopping mall sprawls below.

Westfield World Trade Center shopping mall in interior of Oculus at 9/11 Memorial in NYC
Westfield World Trade Center shopping mall in interior of Oculus
at 9/11 Memorial in NYC

One World Trade Center  

Dubbed the Freedom Tower, this new 1,776-foot-tall building is now the tallest building in the Western Hemisphere.  Positioned on its top levels, One World Observatory™ provides panoramic views of New York City.

One World Trade Center at 9/11 Memorial in NYC
One World Trade Center at 9/11 Memorial in NYC


Brookfield Place

an upscale shopping center, is across the way at 225 Liberty Street.  It is also home to the Le District.  Sort of like a French Eataly, this food court has a variety of counters dispensing cheese, pastries (don’t miss the spectacular round cheese bread, and ask for it heated up), crepes, frites (with an array of sauces), wine, and more.  

Brookfield Place near 9/11 Memorial in NYC
Brookfield Place near 9/11 Memorial in NYC


Le District food court at Brookfield Place near 9/11 Memorial in NYC
Le District food court at Brookfield Place near 9/11 Memorial in NYC


ham sandwiches in Le District food court at Brookfield Place near 9/11 Memorial in NYC
ham sandwiches in Le District food court at Brookfield Place
near 9/11 Memorial in NYC




More NYC attractions.

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images ©2017 Carole Terwilliger Meyers

September 26, 2017

NYC: Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace national historic site; things to do

Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace national historic site  

28 East 20th S., in Flatiron District, (212) 260-1616.  Tu-Sat.  Free.  Guided tours only; at 10 & 11am & 1, 2, 3, & 4 pm; maximum 18/tour.  No reservations.  No pets.

Plan to arrive 30 minutes before your intended tour of the Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace national historic site's 4-story, narrow Dutch brownstone townhouse, so that you can spend time perusing the displays on the ground floor--among them a sweet teddy bear exhibit and another of antique political cartoons--and view a short film on the life of Theodore Roosevelt.  The 40-minute ranger-led tour will take you through the five recreated period rooms (the house was completely recreated in the 1920s) on two floors of this house where Roosevelt lived until he was 15 (the fourth floor is now used as offices).  Rooms are dark and cool, which is especially nice on a warm NYC summer day.  About 60% of the furnishings are original to the house, but most of the interior is recreated from descriptions.  Though the house has large rooms and high ceilings, it is modest in size.  The public entry now was originally the servants’ quarters.  It is interesting to know that this house is the same era as the Merchant’s House Museum.  

sign in the 23rd Street subway station, for Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace in NYC
sign in the 23rd Street subway station, for Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace in NYC


entrance to Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace in NYC
entrance to Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace in NYC


teddy bear display at Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace in NYC
teddy bear display at Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace in NYC


display at Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace in NYC
display at Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace in NYC


desk at Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace in NYC
desk at Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace in NYC


bedroom at Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace in NYC
bedroom at Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace in NYC


wallpaper detail at Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace in NYC
wallpaper detail at Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace in NYC




More NYC attractions.

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images ©2017 Carole Terwilliger Meyers


August 23, 2017

NYC: Merchant’s House Museum; things to do

Merchant’s House Museum  

29 East Fourth St./Lafayette St. near Bowery, in NoHo, (212) 777-1089.  Thur-M 12-5pm, Thur to 8pm.  $15, seniors+students $10, under 12 free.  Tours, including a Ghost Tour, are available.

When it was built in 1832, this 4-story late Federal-style row house, constructed of red brick and white marble, was quite fashionable, and the neighborhood was known as the Bond Street Area.  It was the home of a prosperous middle-class hardware merchant and his family.  Visitors to the Merchant's House Museum today are provided with a loose-leaf binder that guides you through the house and provides information about each room.  The last time it was extensively redecorated was in the 1850s.  Then, after being a home for 98 years, it became a museum in 1936.

With its careful preservation both inside and out, including original furnishings, it offers a rare glimpse into the past.  A narrow, creaky staircase leads to the upper floors, though the children’s rooms are now staff office space.  At the very top, the “Irish girls’ room” in the attic was lived in by a succession of servants and shows a simpler life style.  Today, the neighborhood is fashionable once again, though now it is filled with high-rise apartment buildings and condominiums, boutiques, and restaurants.

Be prepared to leave your purse and bags at the reception in an unlocked space.  Ironically, the attendants expect you to trust them with your valuables but don’t trust you not to steal if they let you carry your own bags, using the excuse of tight spaces.  This policy was almost enough to be a deal breaker for my visit, but I did give in to it, and though I was very uncomfortable leaving my purse with a stranger, and I did remove my wallet and cell phone to carry with me, I enjoyed exploring the premises though I did not enjoy the previous premise.  


front exterior of Merchant’s House Museum in NYC
front exterior of Merchant’s House Museum in NYC


hallway at Merchant’s House Museum in NYC
hallway at Merchant’s House Museum in NYC


Imari china breakfast set at Merchant’s House Museum in NYC
Imari china breakfast set at Merchant’s House Museum in NYC


kitchen at Merchant’s House Museum in NYC
kitchen at Merchant’s House Museum in NYC


bedroom at Merchant’s House Museum in NYC
bedroom at Merchant’s House Museum in NYC


back yard at Merchant’s House Museum in NYC
back yard at Merchant’s House Museum in NYC


back exterior of Merchant’s House Museum in NYC
back exterior of Merchant’s House Museum in NYC


The perfect place to have lunch before or after is at Lafayette.  



More NYC attractions.

More NYC restaurants. 

images ©2017 Carole Terwilliger Meyers
 

April 25, 2017

NYC: Metropolitan Museum of Art; things to do

Metropolitan Museum of Art  

1000 5th Ave./82nd St., (212) 535-7710.  Sun-Thur 10-5:30, F-Sat 10-9, closed M.  suggested donation:  $25, 65+ $17, students $12, under 12 free. 

The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City is the largest museum in the U.S.  The Met, as it is referred to by New Yorkers, has a permanent collection of more than 2 million precious items from around the world and through the ages and holds an amazing number of complete original rooms, some of which even retain their original creaky floors.  The museum poses a daunting challenge to view, and you probably won’t know which way to look first.  Because you really can’t see it all in one day, it is best to pick a few favorite periods or genres from its wealth of beauty and plan to leave some things for next time.  But if it is your first visit or perhaps you suspect it will be you only visit, consider catching just the highlights--which will still take most of a day to accomplish.  Here is a mix of paintings, temples, and a few of the entire intact rooms the museum is famous for, plus a great suggestion on where to have lunch--all doable in one day.  Should you visit in December, be sure to add the first-floor Medieval Sculpture Hall (gallery 305) to your itinerary.  A gigantic Christmas tree is decorated then with angels from the museum’s collection, and atmospheric music resounds. 

interactive map of the galleries

see the best of the Metropolitan Museum in a single visit 


American Wing Sculpture Gallery at Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC
American Wing Sculpture Gallery at Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC
 

exterior of Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC
exterior of Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC


Arms and Armor Gallery at Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC
Arms and Armor Gallery at Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC






kids in Egyptian tomb at Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC
kids in Egyptian tomb at Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC


period bedroom at Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC
period bedroom at Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC




Temple of Dendur at Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC
Temple of Dendur at Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC


The Astor Court at Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC
The Astor Court at Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC


Versailles Panorama at Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC
Versailles Panorama at Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC


Petrie Court Cafe at Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC
Petrie Court Cafe at Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC




More NYC attractions.

More NYC restaurants. 
 

images ©2017 Carole Terwilliger Meyers

March 7, 2017

NYC: Sara D. Roosevelt Park; things to do

Sara D. Roosevelt Park  

Lower East Side.  This 7.85-acre park underwent a $5 million renovation in 2011.  Sara D. Roosevelt Park features a soccer field, track, roller-skating rink, basketball courts, two playgrounds, and a senior center.     

promenade at Sara D. Roosevelt Park in NYC
promenade at Sara D. Roosevelt Park in NYC


Houston Street Playground

 

Rivington Street Playground 


Hester Street Playground  

On Hester St., between Chrystie and Forsyth Sts.  Facilities at Hester Street Playground.  include colorful play structures with padded ground beneath, a large sand pit, swings, and an enclosed toddler area.  The area is unshaded, but in summer an assortment of water features operate. Picnic tables--which tend to be in use by adults playing card games--and restrooms are available.
 
Hester Street Playground in NYC
Hester Street Playground in NYC


tile depicting Hester Street Playground in NYC
tile depicting Hester Street Playground in NYC


adults playing game outside Hester Street Playground in NYC
adults playing game outside Hester Street Playground in NYC


adults playing game outside Hester Street Playground in NYC
adults playing game outside Hester Street Playground in NYC



More NYC attractions.

More NYC restaurants. 
 

images ©2017 Carole Terwilliger Meyers

October 7, 2016

NYC: Fishs Eddy; things to do

Fishs Eddy  

889 Broadway/19th St., Flatiron District, (877) 347-4733, (212) 420.9020. 

Named for an unincorporated village in upstate New York, the Fishs Eddy shop is filled with sturdy dishes, glasses, coffee mugs, and dish towels decorated with Manhattan's skyline.  They make great souvenirs.  Many more selections are found online, and they ship cheap.  

sale at Fishs Eddy shop in NYC
sale at Fishs Eddy shop in NYC


New York dish towels at Fishs Eddy shop in NYC
New York dish towels at Fishs Eddy shop in NYC


souvenir kitchen items at Fishs Eddy shop in NYC
souvenir kitchen items at Fishs Eddy shop in NYC


vintage kitchen items at Fishs Eddy shop in NYC
vintage kitchen items at Fishs Eddy shop in NYC


NYC skyline kitchen items at Fishs Eddy shop in NYC
NYC skyline kitchen items at Fishs Eddy shop in NYC




More NYC attractions.

More NYC restaurants. 

images ©2015 Carole Terwilliger Meyers
 

September 30, 2016

NYC: On Rivington Street; things to do + restaurant review + hotel review

On Rivington Street


The first few blocks of Rivington Street on NYC's Lower East Sides feel like a small neighborhood.  I visit the area almost every time I am in New York.  It would make a great place to stay.

Rivington Street at Rabbi Yaakov Spiegel Way in NYC's Lower East Side
Rivington Street at Rabbi Yaakov Spiegel Way in NYC's Lower East Side


mural door on Rivington Street in NYC's Lower East Side
mural door on Rivington Street in NYC's Lower East Side


THINGS TO DO
#4 at Bowery, (212) 226-7226.  Tu-F 10-6, Sat 12-7, closed Sun-M.  Exuding a mysterious aura, Leekan Designs specializes in beads, wood carvings, gongs, birdcages, jewelry, and much more from Asia, Oceania, and Africa.  It provides a superb browse, and I always seem to find something I must have--most recently a pair of silver cicada-charm dangle earrings.   
 
Leekan Designs on Rivington Street in NYC's Lower East Side
Leekan Designs on Rivington Street in NYC's Lower East Side


bracelets at Leekan Designs on Rivington Street in NYC's Lower East Side
bracelets at Leekan Designs on Rivington Street in NYC's Lower East Side


Rivington Playground  

#14 at Forsyth St., in Sara D. Roosevelt Park.  This park is the largest open space in the neighborhood, and has a senior center and a roller skating rink as well as this lovely Rivington Playground.   
 
Rivington Playground on Rivington Street in NYC's Lower East Side
Rivington Playground on Rivington Street in NYC's Lower East Side


Streit’s matzo factory 

#148-154


WHERE TO EAT
#108

The Falafel Shop  

CLOSED  #127 at Essex St.  There is often a line to order this spot’s delicious hummus, warm pita bread, and outstanding falafel.  Sabich (pronounced "sob-beek") is a full meal consisting of fried eggplant, a hardboiled egg, tahini, fried potato, pickles, pickled turnips, and mango chutney.  Tasty curry lentil soup makes a good side, and the ginger-mint lemonade is a don’t-miss.  Unfortunately, this place is very small, with only a few seats. 

Loreley Restaurant & Biergarten  

#7 at Bowery, (212) 253-7077.  Though the patio in back at Loreley Restaurant & Biergarten is cement and wall to wall with picnic tables, allowing for very little green, it is outdoors and sheltered and makes quite a nice spot to be with a 0.5 of draft--I vote for the house specialty Gaffel Kolsch, a light top-fermented ale from Cologne--and a delicious bratwurst sandwich with fries. 
 
exterior of Loreley Restaurant & Biergarten on Rivington Street in NYC's Lower East Side
exterior of Loreley Restaurant & Biergarten on Rivington Street
in NYC's Lower East Side


biergarten at Loreley Restaurant & Biergarten on Rivington Street in NYC's Lower East Side
biergarten at Loreley Restaurant & Biergarten on Rivington Street
in NYC's Lower East Side


Morgenstern’s Finest Ice Cream  

#2 at Bowery, (212) 209-7684.  The unusual flavors at Morgenstern's Finest Ice Cream include burnt honey vanilla, Vietnamese coffee, black coconut ash, banana durian, and raw milk.  Cones include cake, sugar, and monster-sized.  Unfortunately, the line is often extremely long--I’ve heard of a wait time sometimes approaching two hours!  
 
Morgenstern's Finest Ice Cream on Rivington Street in NYC's Lower East Side
Morgenstern's Finest Ice Cream on Rivington Street in NYC's Lower East Side


WHERE TO SLEEP
#107 at Ludlow St.  Unimpressive from the outside, this stylish contemporary hotel has a small lobby on the second floor.  Beds have a termpur-pedic mattress, and they still provide a goody here at turndown.  Upper-floor rooms have some great views, even from the bathroom, and some rooms are Japanese-style with a steam shower and large slate soaking tub; others have big tubs with a city view.  A continental breakfast is served on the 20th floor.

Off Soho Suites Hotel New York  

11 at Chrystie St., 800-OFF SOHO, (212) 353-0860.  This lodging provides an alternative to overpriced, undersized hotel rooms.  Each unit is equipped with a full kitchen, and the property has a laundry room.  The lobby doubles as the Eleven Rivington art gallery
 
Off Soho Suites Hotel New York on Rivington Street in NYC's Lower East Side
Off Soho Suites Hotel New York on Rivington Street in NYC's Lower East Side

 


More NYC attractions.

More NYC restaurants.


images ©2016 Carole Terwilliger Meyers

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