|
New York City Restaurants
New York State Dining Guides
Official New York State Tourism Site

Guide to New York City
The
Big Apple does not need an intro. It is everything you ever thought
it could be and a whole lot more. When you walk between the high skyscrapers
you feel small, and let's face it: you are. New York is like a small
universe. You will find every people on earth represented not only
in the UN buildings but also on the street and in different parts of
town. Among the main interests of New York are the many museums, the
architecture and. the endless shopping possibilities, especially along
Madison Avenue.
New York City, arguably the world's most vibrant and
sprawling metropolis, occupies five boroughs, each with its own
distinct identity. After all, before the historic 1898 consolidation, Manhattan,
Brooklyn, the Bronx, Queens and Staten Island were each independent municipalities.
Manhattan:
Manhattan, home to the most recognizable sites and much of it laid
out in the innovative grid plan, dominates popular perception of
New York City. Its most famous districts are listed below.
Wall Street and the Financial District:
New York's first district remains its most historic district. Visitors
ponder the beauty of skyscrapers and the quaintness of cobblestones.
Battery Park draws New Yorkers from all boroughs for its panoramic
views and excellent rollerblading.
Harlem:
Long the national epicenter of African-American culture, Harlem
remains proud of its past accomplishments as it looks to the future.
As home to America's most influential artistic, literary and cultural
movement (The Harlem Renaissance), the district gained worldwide
notoriety. Twenty years ago, many visitors feared Harlem. Today,
multi-ethnic Harlem benefits from a booming economy, and a flood
of tourists eager to visit the home of great jazz, great food and
a deep-rooted history.
Greenwich Village:
If the winding streets of this historic neighborhood could talk,
they would speak of poverty and prosperity, free love and socialism,
gay rights and reform. At the turn of the nineteenth century, Greenwich
Village drew free spirits from around the nation. Writer Edna St.
Vincent Millay wrote hedonistic poetry and Eugene O'Neill reinvented
American Drama. As the years went on, rents inevitably rose. Now,
the Villages' townhouses and apartments are some of the most expensive
in the city.
Soho & Tribeca:
Once home to massive factories, artists took over the spaces and
transformed desolate industrial wasteland into bustling urban commerce.
Galleries, designer shops, sophisticated restaurants and trendy bars
followed soon after the artists. Today, galleries thrive among the
chaos creating New York's world-class art scene and there are no
more rent bargains in the once raw lofts.
Chinatown:
A misnomer, as every conceivable Asian ethnicity lives in Chinatown.
Restaurants, grocery stores and trinket shops line the ever-crowded
streets. One need not travel to Hong Kong to obtain a $10 Rolex watch;
plenty are available here. Dim Sum and other favorites lure diners
on practically every corner. Recently, some non-Asian hotspots have
opened and created quite a stir.
Chelsea:
Once a proud working class community, Chelsea recently became a
posh address. As rents in Greenwich Village rose, the vibrant gay
community moved upwards to occupy Chelsea's many brownstones and
loft spaces. Others naturally followed and today's Chelsea reflects
New York's ethnic and cultural diversity. Known for its many nightspots,
club goers party at Cheetah, Twilo and Rebar.
Upper East Side:
Park, Fifth and Madison have always been posh addresses. Whether
in the gilded mansions of yesterday or the modern apartments of today,
old money and high society have made their home here. Consequently,
shops to serve them sprouted up and down Madison Avenue while the
residents endowed museums and collected art. Further east, new money
has overtaken the old Yorkville slum and yuppies share railroad apartments.
Upper West Side:
When the co-ops of the East Side were freer to restrict residents,
the Upper West Side became home to new money (and often Jewish money).
Then, as "modernist" Eastsiders tore down their pre-war palaces,
Upper West Side residents kept their old buildings. Thirty years
later, renters value Upper West Side pre-war real estate, with its
solid (often neo gothic or Victorian) architecture. Yuppies, successful
artists and apartment-sharing twenty somethings flocked here. Today,
the buildings along Central Park West house some of the city's most
notoriously picky co-op boards (Jerry Seinfeld, approved; Madonna,
denied). Meanwhile, bars and restaurants catering to Long Island
and New Jersey folk (a.k.a Bridge and Tunnels) continue to sprout
like weeds along Columbus and Amsterdam Avenues.
Brooklyn:
More famous in name than Manhattan, this massive borough stretches
from the festive Coney Island to the elegant Brooklyn Heights. Wherever
Brooklynites hail from, they are a proud lot. Proud of the Brooklyn
Botanical Gardens. Proud of the Bridge that bears the name Brooklyn.
Proud of their Museum of Art and Children's Museum. Proud of Williamsburg
and Park Slope, two neighborhoods seized from poverty. Proud of Peter
Luger and Planet Thailand. Some are even proud of the accent.
The Bronx:
Home to the Yankees, one of the nation's finest zoos, and an extraordinary
botanical garden, the Bronx offers much to visitors and citizens
alike. Alas, the poverty of some of its districts often overshadows
the positive aspects of this multi-ethnic borough. Recently, areas
such as the South Bronx have shown signs of benefiting from the current
economic boom. All of it really rocks the house.
|