Rockefeller Center
The center of NYC during Christmas, it has throngs of people throughout the year for obscure reasons. The Today show is filmed here, and it is a stop on every tourist tour.
People who love New York City are good at cutting it down to size. Some people choose to focus on a few NYC neighborhoods. Some choose to focus on food, or dance, or architecture. This blog chooses to focus on NYC destinations - places that are worth checking out if you are in the neighborhood.
The center of NYC during Christmas, it has throngs of people throughout the year for obscure reasons. The Today show is filmed here, and it is a stop on every tourist tour.
This is one of the originals. Go here for great people-watching and a non-Barnes and Noble experience.
Magnificent. And there is no way to explain why without visiting. One of the great institutions in the entire world.
Fifth Avenue dead-ends here, and so begins low-scale Greenwich Village. Walk east, and you hit Broadway and University (great street).Walk west and you hit 6th Avenue and the West Village. Walk south and you hit Bleeker and the central village bars.
The new MOMA is a must-see. After two years of renovation, it opened in 2005 to great acclaim. See Matisse, Rodin, and hundreds of other great works of modern times here.
Jackie Kennedy saved this spectacular building for the future, and thank God she did. It defines so much about the City. 100+ train tracks, right into the center of the city.
Chinatown has morphed, and now spills from its original location, south of Canal Street, into Little Italy, and the Lower East Side neighborhood along East Braodway.
Eclectic reaches its extreme point in the lower east side. Chinese laundries sit side by side with underwear stores which sit next to chic bars and sushi lounges.
This shot is illustrative of one of New York's most eclectic streets. In this case, you are looking at the Gormutt doggie bakery on Avenue A.
One of the great central city hang-outs, complete with a great sidewalk cafes, gardens, and places to sit. Behind the New York Public Library on 42nd, between 5th and 5th Avenue.
This is the start or end of any great Hudson river walk. Filled with people and shops and grand views of the Hudson and Ground Zero.
Nothing better on a spring or summer day than hanging at Bethesda Fountain in the middle of Central Park.
In an out-of-the-way corner of East Houston, Katz's is nonetheless a must-see, must-experience, must-taste. Get a Pastrami and let them let you taste as they cut.
You gotta love a good, cheap hot dog. With ripoffs throughout Manhattan, Gray's chugs along as a good Upper Westside neighbor, serving juices, Coke and cheap hot dogs at 72nd Street and Broadway.
Union Square is well-known as the hub of lots of east-side action. With the world's largest Barnes and Noble, the Farmer's Market, and New York's most popular restaurant (Union Square Cafe, it is definitely a place to see and be seen. When there, take note of University (just south), the Faltiron distric (just north), Chelsea (just west, and Gramercy Park and Irving Place (just east). Curry Hill - with Indian delights - is a short walk. Make sure you check out ABC - the fantastic furniture department store on 19th and Broadway.
It's hard to put your finger on why Tribeca feels so attractive. Certainly the human scale is one reason. A second is the restaurants along Greenwich Ave. And then there are the shops - all very hip, lush, sensuous. And of course the Hudson attracts. Just 100 yards away, it lures you with its majesty and its people-rich scenes.
Nights here aren't always so colorful as this photo, but the people and the vibe are always what make SOB's special. Find it on Varick (extension of 7th Ave), just south of Houston.
Willaimsburg is one of the many gems of Brooklyn, and it is one stop from Manhattan by subway - so should not be missed. You can take 30 minutes or a day - and enjoy yourself either way.
Go to the Fulton Ferry historic district in Brooklyn, in Dumbo, and be prepared for a line. Their specialty is coal-fired pizza made with fresh ingredients. Nice. While you are these, make sure you wander to the east river, where you have a spectacular view of the South Street Seaport and Manhattan. Also, walk through Dumbo on Water Street, stopping at Jacques Chocolate Factory along the way.
Always a treat, and in a great funky neighborhood worth strolling, Vinierio's is old school italian pastry cum expresso. Find it in the east village, at 342 East 11th Street, off 1st Avenue.
This wonderful store has now unfortunately become a household name through its expansion. The original store, on 2nd Avenue between 13th and 14th, is still the best. This shot is taken from across the street.