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armybrat_2010 Jan 11th, 2008 02:05 PM

New York City in 1 week
 
My family has never been to New York City. What are the best things to do in New York City during November/December? Any Suggestions?

dmlove Jan 11th, 2008 02:41 PM

Well, for starters, what does your family consist of (toddlers and adults? teenagers and adults? adults and elderly parents?).


armybrat_2010 Jan 11th, 2008 02:54 PM

2 Adults and 2 teenagers 17 and 16

Liz5959 Jan 11th, 2008 04:50 PM

If you're going IN one week, aren't you going to be there in January? Or are you going to be there FOR one week next Nov/Dec?

Liz5959 Jan 11th, 2008 04:52 PM

If you're going IN one week, aren't you going to be there in January?

Or did you mean what to do with only one week in NYC next Nov/Dec?

nytraveler Jan 11th, 2008 05:17 PM

I assume you mean you will be there next Nov/Dec. If you search below you will find about a hundred posts telling people the best things to do in NYC at the holidays.

since it's a year from now a lot of the exact dates and details will differ - but the idea is the same every year.

For the most Christmasy spirit go between Thanksgivng and Christmas to see all the store windows fully decorated (and animated) as well as the Rock Center tree lit and the Center fully decorated.

One key point is this is the most expensive time of year for hotels - so it;s best to reserve as soon as you have your dates fixed (now would be fine - no kidding) since the closer you get to the date the higher prices go.

armybrat_2010 Jan 12th, 2008 07:24 AM

Yes, sorry November/December of 2008. I think someone told our family to try and see the Rocketts Christmas Show. So I think we might try to plan the trip around getting the tickets for that.

mclaurie Jan 12th, 2008 07:30 AM

At the top of this page is a link for destinations. If you chose that and then NYC you'll get lots of information including top attractions. Here's a link to a guide for holiday time in NYC
http://nymag.com/guides/holidays/

Just a heads up that this is the MOST expensive and most crowded time of the year. If your dates are flexible and budget is an issue, consider coming after Dec. 18 and before the 30th or come the first week in Jan. when the decorations are still up but the crowds are gone.

armybrat_2010 Jan 12th, 2008 07:46 AM

Thank you for the link.

nytraveler Jan 12th, 2008 08:33 AM

The radio City Music Hall christmas Show (with the Rockettes) plays daily from before Thanksgiving until New Years- I believe 4 or 5 shows a day. So - you don;t need to plan your trip around that - you can get tickets to any of the shows if you buy when they go on sale.

Separately - although I know a lot of people love this show - and the Music Hall itself is gorgeous - one of the original movie palaces - we prefer the Nutcracker at Lincoln Center. (And the Christmas Spectacular is always shown on TV - at least an abbreviated version - if you want to get an idea of what it is.)

armybrat_2010 Jan 12th, 2008 08:40 AM

Thank you! Is Ground Zero neat? what would teenagers like to do?

HowardR Jan 12th, 2008 10:55 AM

Is Ground Zero neat??????????? You're kidding, right?

armybrat_2010 Jan 12th, 2008 11:12 AM

Of Course!!!! That's at the top of our list of stuff to do!!!! what all is there? I know there is a reflecting pool and they are working on a museum, but is it done yet?

Munday Jan 12th, 2008 11:24 AM

Hey,

I want to New York for a week and created a trip report about it. Hopefully if will give you some ideas of things to do.

Trip report - http://www.jamesmunday.net/blog/inde...new-york-city/

Have a great time, you will love it! :)

armybrat_2010 Jan 12th, 2008 11:29 AM

Thanks!!! Are any of the TV show tapings worth seeing?

Gekko Jan 12th, 2008 11:33 AM

What does your family like to do? Museums? Shopping? History?

Your first step should be purchasing a good guidebook or two and getting a feel for your zillions of options, then return to this forum and ask more specific questions.

Bottom line: "The best things to do" is relative to your family's interests & desires.


armybrat_2010 Jan 12th, 2008 11:40 AM

Well the teens LOVE shopping, and some history, but the adults will do whatever the kids want to for the most part

writerchicknyc Jan 12th, 2008 11:41 AM

There is nothing at the World Trade Center site yet. And when it is built, I doubt that it will be "neat."

What are the teens into? Are they sullen or fun-loving? The other day on the bus, I heard a 15-year-old from England complain to her parents for quite awhile about how she didn't get nearly enough shopping time.

When my own teenaged brother came to visit he was so awed by the magnitude of the city that everything we did was an adventure. And I've heard that even the pickiest kids will find some fun at the Museum of Natural History. The Metropolitan Museum of Art has a great collection of arms and armor, but also a costume institute and musical instruments.

There truly is something for everyone.

armybrat_2010 Jan 12th, 2008 11:45 AM

the 16 YO likes shopping and that's about it, but the 17 YO likes shopping and is into history, and fun loveing

armybrat_2010 Jan 12th, 2008 11:45 AM

the 16 YO likes shopping and that's about it, but the 17 YO likes shopping and is into history, and fun loving

writerchicknyc Jan 12th, 2008 11:46 AM

Ah a cross post. If they love shopping you should hit Soho and 5th Ave around 57th St and shop as you walk downtown until you are pooped or you've hit Lord and Taylor. A stop in Chinatown when you are in Soho would be a good add on, but the shopping isn't as much fun since the crack-down on counterfeit goods.

armybrat_2010 Jan 12th, 2008 11:59 AM

Thanks! What did your brother have the most fun doing? the 17 YO is somewhat of a tomboy!

escargot Jan 12th, 2008 12:40 PM

In the search this forum bar at the top of the page, type in things like "New York Shopping" and "Shopping, Soho, NY" and tons of threads will come up on the left - many with explicit ideas, stores to hit, etc. - even try "New York Shopping with Teens"

For history, you couldn't see it all in a week.

Some favorites of mine, that I think are good for teenagers are the

Tenement Museum; The Confino Family Living History Tour - first, it is only one hour long - the tour leader is an actor in costume/speaks w/ an accent from her country of origin, etc - prior to the tour there is a short film on Ellis Island and immigration which is great - you go in an old tenement that has been
preserved - it is an eye opener and excellent beginning 'piece' of history -

and , the Tenement Museum is on the lower east side which as some cool galleries and stores and is an easy walk from there up through Nolita/Soho which has shops on every street - you can just wander through -
or order the Zagat Shopping Guide or print out a bunch of shopping info from here and a map and you can figure it out.

www.tenement.org

If you are going to do one museum, choose based on their interests, the MET or the Natural History Museum - the annual Christmas tree will be at the MET and it is something to see with the neopolitan creche underneath it - and you can check their website for what else might be there -

but it is worth walking through and then bundle up and walk back to 5th ave area through Central Park

www.centralpark.com

www.centralparknyc.org

good maps, you can see what is in the park that might interest you most (ice skating, statues, literary walk, etc)

There is also free skating at Bryant Park - 10 to rent skates - which is a fun area to be in also

That time of yr I assume St. Patricks, Rockefeller Ctre, etc are all on the list

also do a search for

"NYC itineraries" and "NYC Trip Reports" and that will give you some great reading and preparatory help over the next few months -

depending on when you come, reservations will be expensive and harder to come by, so don't wait too long for those.

there are also many links on tv show tickets too -
have fun

SusanSDG Jan 12th, 2008 02:20 PM

Ground Zero is the burial ground for a couple of thousand New Yorkers, who are not likely to enjoy you saying it's "neat".
It is now just a construction site, with nothing to see or "do".

Ellis Island should be at the top of your list for teenagers. Check their website ahead of time to learn the information you'll need to find if you have ancestors who passed through. The Circle Line ferry that takes you there also stops at the Statue of Liberty, but the lines to get inside the Lady are looong, and not worth it in my opinion. My teenagers also love the Met, shopping in Chinatown and Top of the Rock.

I recommend Pauline Frommer's New York, subtitled "See More, Spend Less" which has a run down of TV tapings, how to get the tickets, etc. We have been to Conan and David Letterman, but Letterman is 18 and over only.

armybrat_2010 Jan 12th, 2008 04:22 PM

I didn't mean any offense by calling it neat. I simply meant it as a memorial to a tragic part of our nations history. Something that is important to our country. Like the Vietnam wall is neat. My cousin was killed in Vietnam and I think it is neat that there is a memorial to those people who gave their lives for our country. I meant the same thing for Ground Zero, and I'm sorry if I offended you by saying that.

nytraveler Jan 12th, 2008 04:45 PM

Ground Zero is not "neat" it is the grave of thousands of innocent victims of terror - and as such is a very somber place to New Yorkers. I strongly encourage you to stay away from it - so you don;t end up like those insensitive idiots who take grinning photos in front of the construction site. (Do you consider your parents graves a "neat" sight for people to visit on vacations?)

NeoPatrick Jan 12th, 2008 05:01 PM

nytraveler, with all due respect did you read armybrat's last post before yours? He has also said that his cousin's name in on the VietNam memorial and yet he considers it "neat". So to answer your question, yes he probably would think it is "neat" if people visited his parents graves. No need to get hung up on modern "slang". Neat doesn't have to be negative in the way you've taken it, nor does it necessarily indicate any disrespect in the way it would if YOU used the word "neat".

armybrat_2010 Jan 12th, 2008 05:02 PM

I'm very sorry. "Neat" was the wrong word to use. Please forgive me. So let me rephrase the question; What is exactly at Ground Zero (a memorial to helpless victims of terror)I realize it is a very serious memorial, and not something to be taken lightly.

armybrat_2010 Jan 12th, 2008 05:11 PM

Thanks NeoPatrick, That is exactly what I mean!!!

ellenem Jan 12th, 2008 09:27 PM

The site the World Trade Center once stood is now an empty hole/construction site while decisions are finalized about the new structures. The PATH train station has reopened within the site. The hole is surrounded by high fencing with some photographs and historical panels in one section. The bigger hole is in the sky.

armybrat_2010 Jan 13th, 2008 04:17 AM

Thanks!!!

armybrat_2010 Jan 13th, 2008 04:42 AM

Do they know when it will open?

Anonymous Jan 13th, 2008 05:16 AM

When what will open?

escargot Jan 13th, 2008 06:32 AM

Armybrat: I think you will have a better feel for what is going on down at the World Trade Center area if you google the memorial, and read links like this, to update yourself on what is going on in the planning of the memorial.

There are a few sites, like
www.buildthememorial.org

I think this will help you to get a feel for what is planned

nytraveler Jan 13th, 2008 09:58 AM

Sorry to jump on anyone - but people do need to have some thought to what they're saying.

"Neat" has not changed in meaning recently.

And to say the WTC site is neat is the equivalent of calling Auschwitz "neat". Simply too insensitive to bear for those of us who lost family or friends. (I'm not suggesting any evil intent on the part of the OP - only total insensitivity/unawareness.)

If s/he wants to call the VietNam memorial neat - I also think that is a very bad choice of words. But - at least it isn't the exact site of the tragedy.

SusanSDG Jan 13th, 2008 10:30 AM

I think the short answer is that there is, unfortunately, nothing at Ground Zero right now, so it can be disappointing to those who hope to have some meaningful experience there in remembrance. There are high fences with only rare openings through which you can see...a construction site. That's why I suggested Ellis Island and others the tenement museum, for history interested and sensitive travellers.

NeoPatrick Jan 13th, 2008 10:39 AM

nytraveler, it's funny you mention Auschwitz. I almost did in my post too, but for a different reason. I still remember getting on the bus leaving Auschwitz. There were two teenaged girls sitting behind me with tears in their eyes. One turned to the mother and said, "that was sooo neat". I really didn't think it was disrespectful at all, and I really do think that for young people, the word "neat" does have a totally different meaning from what you or I would normally accept.


SusanSDG Jan 13th, 2008 10:41 AM

I love the phrase, "the bigger hole is in the sky". If you are fortunate enough, as we were, to have a New Yorker tell you their own experience of September 11, you will have, I think, what you're looking for.

baysidegirl Jan 13th, 2008 05:06 PM

I spent 10 days in NYC over Thanksgiving this year and it was just fabulous. The decorations in the stores and the lights at night on 5th Ave were just beautiful. I was constantly taking photos of displays and store windows.

The sales were just terrific - I even braved Macy's first thing in the morning was fine. I'm from Oz and our exchange rate is excellent at the moment.

Did a couple of walking tours - midtown, Grand Central Station, financial district and a food tour in Bleeker Street. Thoroughly enjoyed them all.

You must go to Central Park - it is just amazing to have such a place amongst all the highrise. I was lucky the leaves were still on the trees and the colours were beautiful.

One memorial I visited was the Vietnam vets one downtown. I really found it moving and spent quite a bit of time reading all the inscriptions. Quite sobering.

Went to Radio City for the Rockettes Christmas spectacular and loved it. OK my be a bit twee but it was pure entertainment and worth every cent in my opinion. Have to do it at least once.

Also Ellis Island is worth going to.
I took an audio tour and found it great. Went past the Statue of Liberty but didn't stop. Not sure what you can see and do there now though.

Take the train to Brooklyn and walk back to Manhattan across the Brooklyn Bridge - great view of Manhattan. I did it at night this trip and the lights were amazing.

Hope that helps. There is so much to see and do I'm sure you will have no trouble filling your time.

One thing I have done in the past and wouldn't do again is the Circle cruise. You queue for ages and then they insist on taking your photo before you get on the boat - really annoying - and you don't see that much anyway. I thought it would give a really interesting perspective of NYC but I was disappointed.

NeoPatrick Jan 13th, 2008 05:12 PM

Once we did the long circle line tour, all the way around Manhattan. It was the longest, most boring ride ever. Couldn't wait for it to end. I'd rather just do the Staten Island Ferry or the yellow taxi ferry.


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