363 Best Sights in New York City, New York

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We've compiled the best of the best in New York City - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Brighton Beach

Brighton Beach

Just steps from the subway, this stretch of golden sand is the showpiece of Brooklyn's oceanside playground. Families set up beach blankets, umbrellas, and coolers, and pickup games of beach volleyball and football add to the excitement. Calm surf, a lively boardwalk, and a handful of restaurants for shade and refreshments complete the package. That spit of land in the distance is the Rockaway Peninsula, in Queens. Amenities: toilets. Best for: people-watching; sunsets.

Brightwater Ct., Brooklyn, NY, 11235, USA

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Brighton Beach Avenue

Brighton Beach

Along this main drag you'll find a Russian caviar boutique amid the Cyrillic shop signs advertising everything from pickled mushrooms to Armani handbags. Local bakeries sell sweet honey cake, cheese-stuffed vatrushki danishes, and chocolatey rugelach from sidewalk tables. Vostochny Bazaar ( 1007 Brighton Beach Ave.) has aisles of freshly prepared to-go food that will entice anyone.

Brighton Beach Ave., Brooklyn, NY, 11235, USA

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Bronx Children's Museum

South Bronx

A long-running community outreach program that used to operate a mobile children's museum out of a purple bus has now found a permanent home within the cavernous, former Powerhouse building in Mill Pond Park. Kids can play and create in this bright, colorful, and bilingual space (English and Spanish) with two arts and crafts areas, a learning area about local nature, a flowing water play table to learn about boats on the river, and \"The Block\"—a kid's version of a neighborhood street scene. Programs, like story times and animal encounters, are scheduled regularly.

Recommended Fodor's Video

Brookfield Place

Financial District

The four towers of this complex (aka the World Financial Center) range from 34 to 51 stories high and are topped with different geometric ornaments designed by Cesar Pelli. Inside are the company headquarters for the likes of American Express and Dow Jones. But the main attraction is the glass-domed Winter Garden atrium with its signature palm trees—a pleasant open space that hosts music, dance performances, a winter ice rink, and links to a variety of stores and restaurants. You can cross West Street at street level, or use the concourse underneath that connects Brookfield Place with the World Trade Center site (and the subway and PATH trains). The massive windows at the top of the Winter Garden's grand staircase on the north side of the atrium provide a view of the 9/11 Memorial Plaza and Westfield World Trade Center (the Oculus) to the east.

Brooklyn Art Library

The library's chief draw is the fascinating Sketchbook Project, thousands of crowd-sourced sketchbooks created by artists and amateurs from around the globe. You could easily while away an afternoon perusing these 32-page meditations, whose topics range from comics, travelogues, and memoirs to catalogs of extinct genetic mutations. Should the addictive musings activate your own imagination, there are art supplies for sale on-site.
28 Frost St., Brooklyn, NY, 11211, USA
718-388--7941
Sight Details
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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Brooklyn Banya

Head to this small Russian bathhouse for a healthful, social experience quite different from the typical modern spa. There are pools and saunas of varying temperatures—moving between them is believed to stimulate the circulation and boost immunity. Bathers (of both genders) can also opt to undergo a variety of treatments, including the traditional platska treatment (exfoliation via beating with leafy oak branches). There's a restaurant that serves Russian specialties, and a roof deck.
602 Coney Island Ave., Brooklyn, NY, 11218, USA
718-853–1300
Sight Details
$40 for all-day bath access; treatments and massages $30–$90

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Brooklyn Book Festival

National and international stars of the book world headline talks and readings at the largest free literary event in New York City, started back in 2006. A week’s worth of book talks, parties, and screenings in various venues around Brooklyn---as well as Queens and Manhattan---lead up to the Sunday main event, based at Brooklyn Borough Hall.

Brooklyn Boulders

Sprawled across a 22,000-square-foot space, Brooklyn Boulders is the go-to for climbing enthusiasts as well as novices interested in learning the ropes. All visitors must first complete a short safety course before taking to the walls, which vary in size and difficulty. Private lessons and group classes are also available, along with open climbing sessions. Acro yoga is one of several nonclimbing classes offered.

Brooklyn Central Library

Prospect Heights
This celebrated art deco edifice is a neighborhood anchor, its monumental facade resembling an open book with bronze panels. Inside, this cathedral to knowledge houses more than a million catalogued books, magazines, and multimedia materials, and serves as a respite for those requiring quiet study, free Wi-Fi, or a quick bite from the café by local pie maker Four & Twenty Blackbirds.
10 Grand Army Plaza, Brooklyn, NY, 11238, USA
718-230–2100
Sight Details
Mon.–Thurs. 9–9, Fri. and Sat. 9–6, Sun. 1–5

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Brooklyn College

The original Georgian-style buildings, elm tree–lined main quad, and lily pond of Brooklyn College were built in the 1930s, and today film and TV crews regularly use the bucolic campus as a location stand-in for Ivy League schools. It's especially beautiful in spring when the cherry blossoms are in bloom. Get a visitor’s pass from any security post or sign up for an hour-long guided tour (10 am and 3 pm most weekdays).

Brooklyn Cyclones

Coney Island
The minor-league Brooklyn Cyclones are a farm team for the New York Mets, and their waterfront baseball stadium is a great place to see budding talent—they've sent dozens of players to the major leagues since they first started in Coney Island in 2001. The Cyclones play from mid-June through early September at MCU Park, and fireworks after every Friday-night game make it a celebration.

Brooklyn Heights Historic District

Brooklyn Heights

Most of Brooklyn Heights, with picturesque brownstones spanning Old Fulton Street to Atlantic Avenue, was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1965. This includes the quiet \"fruit streets\"—Pineapple, Cranberry, and Orange Streets—named in the 19th century by one Lady Middagh, a resident who thought it was more democratic to get rid of the former names of aristocratic families. Ironically, Middagh Street still exists. One notable building in the area is 58 Joralemon Street, which at a glance appears to be a 19th-century Greek revival town house, but is actually a facade for an MTA ventilation shaft.

Old Fulton St. to Atlantic Ave., between Cadman Plaza and Brooklyn Heights Promenade, Brooklyn, NY, USA

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Bush Terminal Park

The opening of this park in 2014 marked a major milestone in the effort to reclaim Sunset Park's formerly industrial waterfront. Once part of the Bush Terminal port complex, the 11-acre public green space has soccer and baseball fields, as well as a nature preserve containing saltwater tidal pools. The preserve's restored wetlands are helping to purify the nearby aquatic habitat. Enter the park at 43rd Street and 1st Avenue and walk past several industrial buildings to get to the park gates. The waterfront esplanade has sweeping views of New York Harbor, including the Statue of Liberty and the Manhattan skyline.
Marginal St., Brooklyn, NY, 11232, USA
888-697–2757
Sight Details
Oct., daily 8–5; Nov.–Feb., daily 8–4; Mar. and Apr., daily 8–5; May–Sept., daily 8–8

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Bushwick Film Festival

Bushwick
Founded in 2007, the Bushwick Film Festival draws a diverse audience of industry professionals and film fans to its annual multiday October event. Features, shorts, and documentaries are submitted by domestic and international filmmakers. Film education programs, with workshops throughout the year, help bridge the gap between craft and community.
Brooklyn, NY, USA
347-450–3464
Sight Details
Oct.

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Bushwick Inlet Park

A $30 million investment turned a former parking lot into this lush green space adjacent to East River State Park. Part of a major revitalization project aimed at the Williamsburg and Greenpoint waterfront, the renovation added a sloped pavilion leading up to a public promenade, a playground, an athletic field, and an environmentally sophisticated building (with restrooms) for community activities. The views are expansive, taking in everything from the Williamsburg Bridge to the Empire State Building.

Bushwick Open Studios

Bushwick
The volunteer-run organization Arts in Bushwick puts together festivals and activities throughout the year. The main event, Bushwick Open Studios, is a huge art fair that takes place over a weekend in summer or early fall. Hundreds of artists throughout the neighborhood open their studios to the public, and there are events, performances, and panel discussions.

Cacao Prieto and Widow Jane

Red Hook
Blending two very worthwhile pursuits, this redbrick building does double duty as both a chocolate factory (Cacao Prieto) and a liquor distillery (Widow Jane). Informative tours of the atmospheric premises (check out the chickens in the courtyard) start in the chocolate factory and then head to the distillery, with tasting samples of both sides of the business. The distressed-wood shop in the front room, with shelves of liquor bottles and gift items, is as lovely as the wrapping on the chocolate bars.
218 Conover St., Brooklyn, NY, 11231, USA
347-225--0130
Sight Details
$20 for a 1-hr tour, weekends book in advance

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Carl Schurz Park

Upper East Side

Named for a German immigrant who was a prominent statesman and newspaper editor in the 19th century, this 14.9-acre park is so tranquil that you'd never guess you're directly above the FDR Drive. Walk along the esplanade and soak up views of the East River and Roosevelt Island across the way. To the north is Randalls (which is conjoined with Wards Island on the east side) and the Robert F. Kennedy Bridge (formerly the Triborough Bridge)—while the sights of locals pushing strollers, riding bikes, or walking their dogs surround visitors. Within the park is a Federal-style, wood-frame house that belies the grandeur of its name: Gracie Mansion, the official residence of the city's mayor. It was built in the 18th century.

Castelli Gallery

Upper East Side

One of the most influential art dealers of the 20th century, Leo Castelli helped foster the careers of many important artists, including one of his first discoveries, Jasper Johns. Castelli died in 1999, but the gallery continues to show works by Roy Lichtenstein, Ed Ruscha, Frank Stella, Robert Morris, and other heavy hitters. There's a satellite gallery in the Times Square area.

18 E. 77th St., New York, NY, 10075, USA
212-249–4470
Sight Details
Free
By appointment only

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Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine

Upper West Side

By some measures the largest cathedral in the world, even with its towers and transepts still unfinished, this divine behemoth comfortably asserts its bulk in the country's most vertical city. As such, the cathedral has long been a global landmark, and it was finally designated a New York City landmark in 2017. The seat of the Episcopal diocese in New York, it acts as a sanctuary for all, offering special interfaith services that include a celebration of New York's LGBTQ+ community. Built in two long spurts starting in 1892, the cathedral remains only two-thirds complete. What began as a Romanesque Byzantine–style structure under the original architects, George Heins and Christopher Grant Lafarge, shifted in 1911 to French Gothic.

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Above the 3-ton central bronze doors is the intricately carved Portal of Paradise, which depicts St. John witnessing the Transfiguration of Jesus. Step inside the cavernous nave: more than 600 feet long, it holds some 5,000 worshippers and the 162-foot-tall dome crossing could comfortably contain the Statue of Liberty (minus its pedestal). The Great Rose Window is the largest stained-glass window in the United States. Sunday services are at 10:30, 2, and 7. Tours, including self-guided and guided Highlights Tour and a Vertical Tour, are offered throughout the week. An Extra-Hours Photography Tour on select Saturdays (check online) offers exclusive photography access outside open hours. The grand and Gothic interior hosts regular musical events including choir performances, organ recitals, artists in residence, and visiting national and international artists; check the online calendar for more details and to purchase tickets. The annual Blessing of the Animals in October is a beloved New York City tradition.

1047 Amsterdam Ave., New York, NY, 10025, USA
212-316–7540
Sight Details
Tours from $15

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Center for Brooklyn History at Brooklyn Public Library

Brooklyn Heights

Four centuries' worth of artifacts bring Brooklyn's story to life at this marvelous, renovated space inside an 1881 Queen Anne–style National Historic Landmark building. The center surveys the borough's changing identity through interactive exhibitions, landscape paintings, photographs, portraits of Brooklynites, and fascinating memorabilia. Upstairs, the Othmer Library’s spectacular reading room, with its stained-glass windows and carved wooden columns, transports visitors to an earlier era.

Central Park Conservancy: Dairy Visitor Center

Central Park

The Dairy (midpark at 65th Street) is one of five visitor centers in the park. The others include Belvedere Castle (midpark at 79th Street), the Chess & Checkers House (midpark at 64th Street), the Charles A. Dana Discovery Center (at the top northeast corner of the park at 110th Street, on the shore of Harlem Meer), and the Columbus Circle Information Kiosk (southwest corner of the park at West 59th Street). All have directions, park maps, event calendars, and volunteers who can give you guidance. The Conservancy also offers themed guided tours, such as views, gardens, and statues and monuments.

Central Park Zoo

Central Park

Even a leisurely visit to this small but delightful menagerie takes only about an hour, unless, of course, you fall under the spell of the zoo's adorable animals, be they the ever-friendly penguins, the spry snow leopard, or other furry or feathered residents. More than 130 species are found here, but there's no space for animals like zebras and giraffes to roam. Don't miss the sea lion feedings, possibly the zoo's most popular attraction, daily at 11:30, 1:30, and 3:30, or the penguin feedings at 10:40 and 2:30 daily.

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Clustered around the central Sea Lion Pool are separate exhibits for each of the Earth's major environments: penguins and seabirds live at Polar Circle; the highlights of the open-air Temperate Territory are the chattering monkeys; and the Tropic Zone contains the flora and fauna of rain forests. The Tisch Children's Zoo (no additional ticket required) gives kids the opportunity to feed sheep, goats, cows, and pigs. The 4-D theater shows 15-minute-long, family-friendly films that feature sensory effects like wind, mist, bubbles, and scents. Children under 12 are not admitted to the zoo without an adult.  All visitors must reserve a date-specific ticket in advance.

Entrance at 5th Ave. and 64th St., New York, NY, USA
212-439–6500
Sight Details
$22.95; free for children 2 and under

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Chelsea Piers

Chelsea

This sports-and-entertainment complex along the Hudson River between 17th and 23rd Streets, a phenomenal example of adaptive reuse, is the size of four 80-story buildings laid out flat. There's pretty much every kind of sports activity happening both inside and out, including golf (check out the multitier, all-weather outdoor driving range), sailing classes, ice-skating, rock climbing, soccer, bowling, gymnastics, and basketball. Plus there's a spa and elite sport-specific training. Chelsea Piers is also the jumping-off point for some of the city's boat tours and dinner cruises.

Children's Museum of Manhattan

Upper West Side

In this five-story exploratorium, children ages one to seven are invited to paint their own masterpieces, float boats down a \"stream\" (seasonal), rescue animals with Dora and Diego (in an exhibition created in collaboration with Nickelodeon), and walk through or crawl under larger-than-life contemporary sculptures at Inside Art. In the immersive, comic book–inspired Superpowered Metropolis exhibit, a trio of lively pigeons—Zip, Zap, and Zoom—guide you through a 1,500-square-foot space equipped with interactive features like a climbable, two-story tree house. Special exhibits are thoughtfully put together and fun. Art workshops, science programs, and storytelling sessions are held daily.

212 W. 83rd St., New York, NY, 10024, USA
212-721–1223
Sight Details
$17
Closed Mon.

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Children's Museum of the Arts

West Village

The CMA encourages children ages 1 to 15 to get creative through a variety of mediums. Along with the requisite children's museum offerings like pencils, chalk, and paint, you'll find a clay bar; a media lab with mounted cameras and a recording studio; a small slide and colorful ball pond that kids can play in; an airy exhibition space with rotating exhibits (and workshops inspired by exhibits); a permanent collection of children's art from more than 50 countries; and classes in ceramics, origami, animation, filmmaking, and more. Check the website for a busy calendar of events.

103 Charlton St., New York, NY, 10013, USA
212-274–0986
Sight Details
$13, $30 for family of up to 5 people
Closed Tues., Wed.

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Christie's

Midtown West

At the New York outpost of this famous auction house, you could easily spend an hour or more wandering the free, museumlike galleries filled with impressive works of art, estate jewelry, furniture, and other rarely displayed objects that are usually housed in (and, most likely, soon to be returned to) private collections. One of the first items to be auctioned here, when it opened in 2000, was the \"Happy Birthday\" dress worn by Marilyn Monroe when she sang to President Kennedy (it sold for more than $1.2 million). Yes, the auction house has come a long way since James Christie launched his business in England by selling two chamber pots, among other household goods, in 1766. The lobby's abstract Sol LeWitt mural alone makes it worth visiting the 310,000-square-foot space. Hours vary by sale, so call ahead to confirm.

20 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, NY, 10020, USA
212-636–2000
Sight Details
Free
Closed weekends

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Christmas Markets

From November through Christmas, holiday markets pop up all over Brooklyn, many with a creative, DIY bent. Some are one day or weekend only, others recur for several weeks. Artists & Flea is a year-round market with a holiday spin leading up to December, while annual events like the BUST Holiday Craftacular (), the Brooklyn Holiday Bazaar (), and the Etsy NY Handmade Cavalcade () each take place over one weekend in November or December. One-day events include the Greenpointers Holiday Market ().
Brooklyn, NY, USA
Sight Details
Nov.--Dec.

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Christopher Park

West Village

You might have to share a bench in this tiny park with George Segal's life-size sculptures of a lesbian couple: titled Gay Liberation, the white-painted bronzes were cast in 1980 but not installed until 1992. Standing next to them is a gay male couple, captured mid-chat.

Bordered by Stonewall Pl. and W. 4th, Grove, and Christopher Sts., New York, NY, 10014, USA

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City Hall

Financial District

What once marked the northernmost point of Manhattan today houses the office of the mayor and serves as a gathering place for demonstrators and the news crews who cover their stories. This is the one of the oldest City Halls in the country, a striking (but surprisingly small) building dating from 1803. Free tours are available  weekly---just sign up in advance online and arrive early to check out the fantastic exterior details. Inside, highlights include the Rotunda where President Lincoln lay in state in 1865 under a soaring dome supported by 10 Corinthian columns; the Victorian-style City Council Chamber; and the Governor's Room, an elegantly preserved space with portraits of historic figures, as well as a writing table that George Washington used in 1789 when New York was the U.S. capital.

City Hall Park, New York, NY, 10007, USA
212-788–2656-for tours
Sight Details
Free

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