Landmarks of New York

New York is an ultra dynamic, constantly in motion city that stuns and captivates you, plunging you into an abyss of colorful multicolor and many-sided emotions.

Entertainment and attractions

The main advantage of New York is that it will always appear in front of you exactly the side of its many-sided character that you like: museums or shops, hip-hop parties in the Bronx or the voices of the Metropolitan Opera, old buildings or shining mirrored facades of skyscrapers.

New York has collected almost everything that is on the planet – various examples of art, culture, history and religion, all the best and worst features of civilization.

City skyscrapers immediately catch the eye of every tourist – Chrysler, Woolworth, Conde Nast, Empire State Building, Seagram. The Statue of Liberty is the second landmark without which New York cannot be imagined. It is located on the island of the same name, next to which is the island – the Ellis Museum at the mouth of the Hudson.

The Museum Mile near Hyde Park is one of the main points of the route. It all starts with the Metropolitan Museum of Art, which holds the largest number of art collections in the Western Hemisphere. There is a museum on almost every street further: the Barrio Museum at 104th Street, the Museum of New York at 103rd Street, the Jewish Museum at 92nd Street, the Cooper-Hewitt Design Museum at 91st Street, the Academy of Painting at 89th Street , the Guggenheim Museum at 88th and the New Gallery at 86th.

Broadway is the longest street in the city, famous for its numerous theaters and show programs. The Financial District is home to the New York Stock Exchange and Wall Street. Wall Street is the financial center of New York and all of America. And of course, one cannot fail to notice the Brooklyn Bridge, which connects Manhattan with Brooklyn.

Times Square is home to the Biltmore Theater and the largest toy store in the world. The Bronx is home to a zoo and a botanical garden. Fifth Avenue and Madison are lined with posh shops and Rockefeller Center. It is in Rockefeller Center that every Christmas since 1931 a fir tree has been set up, which tourists from all over the world flock to see.