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It's a Wonderful Town - brash,
noisy and buzzing with energy. New York is simply the most dynamic city
you are ever likely to visit. The sights are must-sees and so well known;
they roll off the tongues of people who have never been near the place.
The Empire State Building, Statue of Liberty, Central Park, Manhattan,
Brooklyn Bridge, Greenwich Village and Chinatown - the list is endless.
Take in a Broadway show, shop at Bloomingdales or Macy's on 34th Street
and enjoy fast food where it is served best. But don't miss the point.
Bite into this Big Apple and at the core you will find a city, which is
really all about the streets and the people who bring them to life.
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Lower Midtown
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For hundreds of years, this was New York. Originally established by the
Dutch in 1625 (hence the city's original name, Nieuw Amsterdam), the first
settlements sprung up here, on the southern tip of Manhattan Island, and
everything uptown was farm country and wilderness. While all that's
changed, this is still the best place to search for the past. Fraunces
Tavern, on Pearl Street, was the site of countless great moments in city
history.
The now-touristy South Street Seaport area is surrounded by reminders of
when shipping was the raison d'etre of the city. The Brooklyn Bridge
stands proudly as the symbol of a new world of engineering marvels that
came to the city in the 19th century. Wall Street - now a state of mind
much grander than the actual narrow street - dominates the global mindset
with the New York Stock Exchange. Battery Park City is where downtown
residents are found, while Battery Park itself is your point of departure
for the Statue of Liberty, Ellis Island, and Staten Island. |
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Midtown East
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The area including Fifth Avenue and everything east from 34th to 59th
streets is the more upscale side of the midtown map. This side of town is
short of subway trains, served primarily by the Lexington Avenue 4, 5, 6
line.
Midtown East is where you'll find the city's finest collection of grand
hotels, mostly along Lexington Avenue and near the park at the top of
Fifth. The stretch of Fifth Avenue from Saks at 49th Street extending to
FAO Schwarz at 59th is home to the city's most high profile haute
shopping, including Tiffany Co., Cartier and Bergdorf Goodman, but more
mid-priced names like Banana Republic, Ann Taylor, and Liz Claiborne have
moved their superstores in of late. The stretch of 57th Street between
Fifth and Lexington avenues is also known for high-fashion boutiques (Chanel,
Hermès) and high-ticket galleries, but change is underway since Warner
Brothers (at the intersection with Fifth), Levi's, and Niketown squeezed
in. You'll find plenty of spill over along Madison Avenue, a great strip
for shoe shopping in particular. |
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Midtown West
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Midtown West, the vast area from 34th to 59th streets west of Fifth Avenue
to the Hudson River, encompasses several famous names: Madison Square
Garden, the Garment District, Rockefeller Center, the Theater District,
and Times Square. This is New York's tourism central, where you'll find
the bright lights and bustle that draws people from all over the world. As
such, this is also the city's biggest hotel neighbourhood, with choices
running the gamut from budget to deluxe.
The 1, 2, 3, 9 subway line serves the massive neon station at the heart of
Times Square, at 42nd Street between Broadway and Seventh Avenue, while
the B, D, F, Q line runs up Sixth Avenue to Rockefeller Center. The N, R
line cuts diagonally across the neighbourhood, following the path of
Broadway before heading up Seventh Avenue at 42nd Street. The A, C, E line
serves the west side, running along Eighth Avenue. |
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Upper Eastside
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North of 59th Street and east of Central Park is some of the most
expensive residential real estate in the city - and probably the world.
This is New York at its most gentrified: Walk along Fifth and Park
avenues, especially between 60th and 80th streets, and you're sure to
encounter some of the wizened WASPs and Channel-suited socialites that
make up the most rarefied of the city's population. Madison Avenue to 79th
Street is the moneyed crowd's main shopping strip, recently vaunting ahead
of Hong Kong's Causeway Bay to become to most expensive retail real estate
in the world--so bring your platinum card. You can also use it to stay at
one of the neighbourhood's remarkably luxurious hotels, such as the
Carlyle or the Mark, or to dine at four-star wonders like Le Cirque 2000
and Daniel. |
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Upper Westside
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North of 59th Street and encompassing everything west of Central Park, the
Upper West Side contains Lincoln Center, arguably the world's premier
performing-arts venue; the American Museum of Natural History, whose
renovated Dinosaur Halls garner justifiably rave reviews; and a number of
mid-priced hotels whose larger-than-midtown rooms and nice residential
location make them particularly good bets for families. Unlike the more
stratified Upper East Side, the Upper West Side is home to an egalitarian
mix of middle-class yuppiedom, laid-back wealth (lots of Celebes and
moneyed media types call the grand apartments along Central Park West
home), and ethnic families who were here before the gentrification. |
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