This is my attempt to rank the best places in New York for day-long experiences. I try to set aside my personal tastes, although they will doubtless be reflected to some extent.
1. Metropolitan Museum and Central Park.
New York's best museum is full of paintings, artifacts, and curated rooms representing some of the best of man's creation of the past 10,000 years or so. The cafeteria is a work of art too, and The Met is in Central Park.
2. Greenwich Village (Strand, bars and restaurants, Washington Square Park and NYU; historic sites)
Comprising countless bars and restaurants (several of historical significance), three iconic colleges, and some of the best off-Broadway theaters in the city; and including such landmarks as St. Mark's Church, The Blue Note, The Strand Bookstore, and Washington Square Park, Greenwich Village is the most intellectually important neighborhood in the United States (at least historically).
3. Brooklyn Botanic Garden and Brooklyn Museum (including Prospect Park, etc.)
Of New York City's two great botanical gardens, the one in Brooklyn is more walkable and better manicured. It is next to the Brooklyn Museum, which is probably the best museum outside of Manhattan, and very near Prospect Park, the Brooklyn Library, and Grand Army Plaza. You probably can't see all of these in a day, but your options are vast.
4. Coney Island and New York Aquarium
Constantly evolving in ways that haven't (yet) sacrificed its character, Coney Island is becoming as important to New York now as it was in its golden age. Beyond the beach and boardwalk are the New York Aquarium, Luna Park, the original Nathan's, the Brooklyn Cyclones - and such events as the Mermaid Parade or the hot dog eating contest if you come on the right day. A day at Coney Island should be unforgettable.
5. Times Square and Broadway
Many New Yorkers love to hate Times Square for its commercialism as they fondly recall its past days of seedy and dangerous vitality; but the area is an essential part of New York. The Broadway theaters are there, as well as giant restaurants, and such commercial museums as Madame Tussaud's and Ripley's. Times Square is one of the great spectacles in the United States, and you're likely to enjoy it.
6. Bronx Zoo
The Congo Gorilla Forest, the monorail tour, and the Bronx River entranceway are the best of many great spaces here. The obstacle course, ziplining, and nature walk area, which have nothing to do with animals in captivity are enjoyable too. You will walk satisfying miles during a day at this zoo.
7. Natural History Museum, NY Historical Society, and Central Park
The Natural History Museum almost rivals the Met in its vastness, beauty, and cultural importance. The sites - such as the squid and the whale, the planetarium, the gemstone exhibit, the dinosaur bones, and the dioramas - seem endless. Neighboring the museum are The NY Historical Society (a museum), and the west side of Central Park, where you can visit Strawberry Fields, which commemorates John Lennon, and view the Dakotas, where he lived.
8. Museum of Modern Art (MOMA) and Central Park
The MOMA holds the greatest collection of modern art in the city; much of it (such as Monet's water lilies) appealing to conventional tastes. As with the Met and AMNH, the grandeur of the museum itself is as impressive as the pieces. All three museums border Central Park too.
9. The Cloisters and Fort Tryon Park
New York City's medieval castle can only be accessed via a walk through Fort Tryon Park, which is one of New York City's best. Those with little interest in the museum's relics, tapestries, and medieval art objects will nevertheless enjoy its courtyards, chapels, and gardens. The Cloisters' balconies have great views of the Hudson River too.
10. New York Botanical Gardens
The largest, by far, of New York City's botanical gardens are in the Bronx, next to the zoo and Fordham University. You will walk a great deal here, through both curated gardens and unmolested forests. The gardens comprise a first-rate restaurant, its own New York Public Library branch, and gift shops where you can buy plants. The NYBG is four times larger than Brooklyn's BBG, but about equally popular.
11. Statue of Liberty / Ellis Island / Battery Park / Fraunces Tavern
The Statue of Liberty is big enough to inhabit its own island and may be more impressive than you expected. It is next to Ellis Island, which has its own immigration museum, and a typical tourist's experience involves waiting in line, ferrying to the statue, ferrying to Ellis Island, and then returning. By then, your day may be nearly over, which is why the experience disappoints some tourists. If you wake up early enough, you can include the historic Fraunces Tavern in your itinerary, and the American Museum of the Native American is also nearby and free.
12. Little Italy / Chinatown / Lower East Side
Little Italy is for tourism, while Chinatown is a more legitimate community full of restaurants, temples, and shops of all sorts. The Lower East Side has a few historically significant Jewish stores and landmarks (such as Katz's deli, Russ & Daughters, and Yonah Schimmel's knish store), but most traces of the Jewish culture that once defined it are gone.
You don't need much knowledge to enjoy Little Italy. For Chinatown, bring a guide if you can.
13. Brooklyn Bridge / Brooklyn Heights (including promenade) and Brooklyn Bridge Park (including Dumbo)
A walk from the Manhattan side of the Brooklyn Bridge will end in Brooklyn between the Brooklyn Heights and "Dumbo" neighborhoods. Visit Brooklyn Heights, to see some of the city's most exclusive brownstone apartments as well as the cinematically familiar Brooklyn Heights Promenade. Dumbo is full of excellent restaurants and cafes, and includes Brooklyn Bridge Park, which is one of New York's best, largest, and most modern parks.
14. Grand Central Station / New York Public Library / Bryant Park
Grand Central is the most architecturally impressive train station in the United States.
A block or so away is the New York Public Library; a marvelous museum of books. The Great Room of the NYPL is a majestic place to sit and read amidst hundreds of thousands of volumes.
Bryant Park is essentially the backyard of the NYPL. A number of craft, food and drink shops line the park's perimeter. You can ice skate there too.
15. Other Museum Mile art museums: Guggenheim / Frick / Neue Gallerie, etc.
There are too many notable museums and cultural landmarks in New York's "museum mile," which stretches across the east side of Central Park, to name or rank them all. Some of the best (not already mentioned) include The Frank Lloyd Wright-designed Guggenheim, the Frick Collection, and the Neue Gallerie which houses Austrian and German art and a Viennese cafe.
16. Central Park itself.
If Central Park weren't included in so many entries above, it would have a higher ranking. It comprises Belvedere Castle, the Shakespeare in the Park theater, the Ramble, Strawberry Field, the Great Lawn, bodies of water, a forest, and its own zoo. It is the U.S.'s most famous park.
17. Harlem and East Harlem.
From the City College of New York to the Hamilton row houses to 125th Street, to the Apollo Theater, Harlem is full of architecturally and culturally important places. There are also beautiful churches, and soul food and African restaurants.
Much has been made of Harlem's rapid gentrification, but it's still Harlem, it's still tough, and you don't want to look too much like a tourist when you walk down 125th.
East Harlem is a separate neighborhood (still "Spanish Harlem,"), full of great Latin American food and culture. Like Greenwich Village, Harlem (and East Harlem) is a place to walk around in and see the sorts of places you might know from books and movies.
18. Columbia University, Riverside Church, Grant's Tomb
Columbia University is a complete Ivy League campus in Manhattan, full of stately libraries and centuries-old academic buildings. Near it is the enormous Riverside Church, which may be New York City's most important left-wing historical site - where Martin Luther King gave his speech on Vietnam, and many radical, intellectual clergymen preached. Across from the church is the domed marvel, Grant's Tomb. A steep climb down from all of this brings you to Riverside Park, on the Hudson, which spans a large part of Manhattan's length. (Barnard College is near as well.)
19. Corona Park, including Citi Field, US Open, the NY Hall of Science, etc.
Citi Field is my happy place. During the US Open, you can watch the pros practice tennis in the park, collect free US Open balls, and later, enjoy a Mets game in New York's best stadium. If they win, you return in collective triumph with fans crowding the 7 train. An Edwin Diaz save in a close game, glorified by the trumpets that invoke his entrance, is simply euphoric.
Corona Park is the Queens analogue to #3 on this list, in Brooklyn. We have Queens Museum, Queens Theater, New York Hall of Science, Queens Zoo and Queens Botanical Gardens - all of which are nice, but unlikely to justify a trip beyond Manhattan, which is why puts this park is lower on the list.
Corona Park, nevertheless is a place for real New Yorkers to enjoy New York. On any nice summer day, you will see thousands of us playing soccer, volleyball, baseball, walking our babies or dogs, or barbecuing in the park.
20. Arthur Avenue
Arthur Avenue, in the Bronx, is New York' other Little Italy. It is larger and more authentic, less congested of course, and with fewer tourists than the one in Manhattan.
21. Williamsburg and other gentrifying neighborhoods of Brooklyn
Several neighborhoods in Brooklyn, for better or worse, are famous for rapid gentrification. Williamsburg and Bushwick are the most famous of these. There are many restaurants and bars in these areas. I will avoid controversy by saying more.
22. Flushing Chinatown, Queens
The other Chinatown is in Flushing, Queens. It is about as large, and more "pan-Asian" than the one in Chinatown, with many Korean restaurants complementing its Chinese restaurants and stores.
There is more room to build in Queens, and as a result, Flushing Chinatown has larger, and more exclusive and expensive restaurants, although most places to eat in Flushing are affordable.
23. Snug Harbor in Staten Island
Defunct stately mansions now belonging to the public, and gorgeous Chinese gardens mark Snug Harbor in Staten Island. Snug Harbor might rank higher if it were in another borough; Staten Island being the least accessible and least appreciated borough.
24. The High Line and Chelsea Market
Dilapidated train tracks were transformed into "The High Line" several years ago. Part of this popular walking path is adjacent to Chelsea Market, which, in most other cities, would be the definitive market to shop and eat at.
25. Circle Line tour around Manhattan.
The best way to glance at most important sites in Manhattan is via a Circle Line boat tour. It's nominally for tourists, but it's the best way to see "all of Manhattan" in an hour or two.
26. Orchard Beach and City Island
Orchard Beach is the Bronx's best beach, which in itself guarantees that it is full of energetic and friendly visitors who barbecue and plant Puerto Rican and Dominican flags by their beach towels. Across the bridge is City Island which is a "small town" in a giant city and New York's most famous location for seafood.
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