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Tenement Museum NYC
We want to spend an afternoon (probably Sunday) visiting the Tenement Museum.
1. Do we have to buy tickets in advance? 2. How do we get there from the Salisbury Hotel? 3. Is it practical to do 2 tours? I would like to do the "Piecing it together Tour and there is also a walking tour of the area. |
Yes - definitely get tickets in advance. hopstop will guide you ther. You can do a walking tour afterward if you do the Tenement tour early enoughin the day.
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Yes, it's practical to do two tours (if you look at the Tenement Museum website, their tours are set up to do both a building tour and a walking tour. The tour of the building itself is only one hour, and they necessarily run on time -- otherwise it would get impossibly crowded). If you're set on doing a particular tour ("Piecing it Together", which is the one we did, and really enjoyed), then yes, I would make advance reservations, especially on a weekend.
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Where is the Salisbury?
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57th st near Carnegie.
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Check out their website, it answers your questions and you can order tickets there. It shows you what tours are available on what days (via a calendar) and what ones have openings.
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I tried to visit The Tenement Museum last year and I never found it. My husband & I walked around for about a half hour with the address before we gave up. I visit NYC frequently and am fairly familiar with it - not sure what our problem was!
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emboston, I'm not sure either because it's on a very well-known street!
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In fact, if you go to googlemaps.com and type in Tenement Museum, you'll actually see it on the map!
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I had no problem finding the Museum. Took the subway but don't remember which one or where I was staying at the time. Probably came from midtown. I didn't get a reservation because it was just one person. I got there pretty early and had to wait to get one of the tours. That was fine because I just explored the neighborhood but I wouled definitely make a reservation. Really enjoyed the museum and I did the "Piecing It Together Tour".
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Take the B or D train at Columbus Circle and follow the directions provided by the Museum
Or take the E at 7 Ave and 43rd to West Fourth and take the B, D, F as described below B or D to Grand Street Exit at Grand and Chrystie. Walk east (away from Bowery) for four blocks. Take a left at Orchard Street and walk north for two blocks to the Museum Shop 108 Orchard Street. F to Delancey Street or the J, M or Z to Essex Street Once you get off any of these subways, walk two blocks away from the Williamsburg Bridge (west) to Orchard Street, turn left and walk 1/2 block south to the Museum Shop 108 Orchard Street, between Delancey and Broome, near Delancey. |
if your not familar with the area,just take a cab there,then go to Katzs deli right around the corner--a real NYC experience,Then take the subway back --its a great exeprience
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My experience suggests it's a good idea to make reservations ahead for the tours you want. They sell out sometimes.
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We did "Piecing it together" last month and I had gotten tickets online. We got their earlier, there was space available on an earlier tour but since we had got the tickets online, we couldn't switch. If we had bought them in person, it seemed like we could have changed them. {something to keep in mind should plans change}
There is a movie to watch in the gift shop and browsing through the gift shop filled in our time. We had lunch at Katz's Deli before hand. Great tour and lunch! |
Sorry for the typo, that should be the E train at 7th and 53rd Street.
++++++++++++++ There are many interesting restaurants in the neighborhood including Bereket, inexpensive Turkish food where many cabbies go and eat. Clinton St Bakery, where they have table service and possible the best biscuits in the city. Great brunches, it is a zoo on the weekends. Inoteca http://nymag.com/listings/restaurant/inoteca01/ Fabulous small plate Italian dishes Congee Village Congee is a thick Chinese rich porridge also called juk. They have other dishes and it is just to the right of the rear entrance of the Museum.. And whatever you do be sure to go Il Laboratorio del Gelato right next to the Museum |
Make sure you stop and get pickles from the pickle stand down the street! The Museum is pretty easy to find - there is a large sign on the side of the building. I have been on the tour with many times with school kids and they always enjoy it - especially the walking tour!
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Gus's Pickles is no longer on Orchard Street on the Lower East Side. There is, however, the Pickle Guys at 49 Essex Street whose quality is equal to that of Gus's.
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Bookmarking.
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Bookmarking
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We plan to visit on a weekday in either late September or early October this yr. Do we still need to buy our tickets (2) of them in advance and if we do, how much in advance should we buy them? Is a week enough time? Thanks.
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Over Memorial Day weekend we bought four same day sweatshop tickets online. Some of the tours, however, were sold out and many times were unavailable.
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Thanks, Marija.
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We hadn't gone yet when I bookmarked this info., but we had a chance to do the Irish Outsiders tour on our last trip to New York. We bought our tickets ahead of time because we wanted a specific time, and they do sell out. I was glad we arrived early because we had to all walk to the tenement building together, and if we had been late we would have missed out. If you get there early Doughnut Plant is nearby, and they have great doughnuts. Katz's is close by for lunch.
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I went last year on a tour, and there was only one tour not sold our, and it had just one opening. Luckily for me, it was also just a 15 minute wait! If you have a specific tour in mind, I'd definitely book online.
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Thanks, volcanogirl and lcuy. I guess we'll buy our tickets in advance. Any idea how long we can wait until we buy them? A week, two weeks, a month?
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Tonight, we went for a lecture and a large sampling of today's version of immigrant food. We had all sorts of items including german style potato salad, pretzels, pickles, Italian cheese and sopresetta, to a modern Chinese pastry. All are from neighborhood stores including the Pickle Guys, Di Palo, and others. Fun and informative.
Lst year we went for a presentation and samples of Jewish breads. If you are interested in food besides Volcanogirl's recommnedation are the Essex Market, Yonah Schimmel's for knishes and Russ and Daughters for lox and and other smoked fish. For dessert be sure to go to il laboratorio del gelato. If go to Katz's and you get a meat sandwich be sure to "bribe" the cutter for $1 for a taste. If you go with a kid let him/her do it. N.B. You must be able to climb stairs for the tour at the Tenement Museum. |
We went to Russ and Daughters too. We got some Babka to go. I hope I'm spelling that right. It's just something that we've always wanted to try, and they don't sell it in our area. Lots of neat little authentic old school shops in the area that are fun to explore.
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<<<If go to Katz's and you get a meat sandwich be sure to "bribe" the cutter for $1 for a taste>>>
And a much thicker sandwich! |
I always cringe at the words authentic and quaint. That is how some live and it is not quaint or authentic to them but their lives. Sometimes I see people say they want to do and see what the real people do, as if they are Margaret Mead and and the others are the Somoans.
The irony of calling Russ and Daughters authentic is that has been taken over by a grandson who first went to law school. None of the rags to riches immigrant success story. And the people behind the counter are Jewish, Hispanic, and Asian including a guy from Nepal who has a most fantastic life story. BTW, Russ is as good or better than it ever was. Authentic takes on different and new meaning when all is known. |
When we went in September last year we just walked in and bought our tickets on the day. No problem as it was weekday. if you have to wait , which is maybe just an hour, then go to Katz's deli round the corner.
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Thank you, lateagain. You gave me the answer I wanted!
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We went to the Tenement Museum and tour in their apartments on a very hot and humid day. The apartments are not a/c nor should they be, just a heads up for chosing a cooler day if possible.
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By authentic I meant that they've been around since the early 1900s and have been run by multiple generations of families that have lived in the area and have some history there vs. Doughnut Plant that is also good, but new and doesn't have the history behind it. I really can't imagine that they would cringe at being called authentic.
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annetti, the tickets didn't go on sale that far in advance. When I tried to buy them they weren't available yet so I just kept checking back on the website. The early morning times were selling out first when I was checking. Good luck!
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Volcanogirl: iwould imagine that the recipes that are handed down that would make it authenic. I would agree with you. Thanks.
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It is akin to people staring down at us from the hop-on bus. It is the way one was raised and authentic makes it sound like you subject to a sociological study, rather than being natural.
Donut Plant is about 12 years old and the owner/baker worked up his own recipes. |
I used to conduct business with Native American tribes and I would never say is that an authentic head dress or dance. It is theirs and to question the authencity one must know about that culture. Is like asking is that real?
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I will drop the subject as to not be tedious.
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BigAle, I won't point at you on the street or make you pose for pictures if I see you.
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