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By Susan Shemin [ 15/02/2008 ] Publishing Free Articles Zone articles is subject to our Publisher's Terms Of Service |
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Visitors to New York City check out the main attractions, like Times Square, the Statute of Liberty, Rockefeller Plaza and Broadway, but there so much more to experience in Manhattan! Manhattan is made up of neighborhoods, each with its own identity and culture and excitement. Explore Manhattan by walking -- you can take the subway or a cab to the area, but be sure to walk once you are there, so pack your comfortable walking shoes!
The Grand Central Station area is a perfect example. To begin with everyone must experience the cavernous Grand Central train station with its 2-story windows on each side and gigantic domed ceiling, complete with drawings of star maps. Do not hesitate to look up, but be prepared to dodge the scurrying workers busy on their errands -- time is of the essence for them -- and they will walk right over you! If you have the time, check out the lower level which has a number of restaurants and oh, so cool, deep leather chairs in the center, and, of course, the famous Oyster Bar. The Oyster Bar has the best seafood in the area, but the attraction is the ambiance: tiled walls and a high ceiling, and the feeling of eating in a restaurant eons ago in an old-fashioned train station.
Grand Central Station, which is found at 42nd Street and Park Avenue, is home to both subways and the commuter railroad, MetroNorth, which goes “upstate” to Westchester and Connecticut. But did you know that Grand Central sits right in the middle of Park Avenue? Park Avenue has a narrow, go-around elevated street that circumvents the Station, but the wide Avenue itself stops at 46th Street and begins again at 42nd Street. Cannot tell you how many times a bewildered tourist stopped me and asked what happened to Park Avenue and how do I get to Park and 50th Street?
Ok, here is your exploring-Manhattan exercise: Go up the escalators from the Station. Here you are in the walkway through the 200 Park Avenue building and continue walking uptown. (There is no north, nor any directions in Manhattan; there is only uptown and downtown and toward the Hudson River or the East River.) From 200 Park Avenue go across the street to 230 Park Avenue and continue through the building in the Art Deco tunnels and walking out again into the wide and bright main thoroughfare of Park Avenue. This is a busy business section of Manhattan -- watch out for the taxis and the black Town Car radio cars! They move to turn no matter if people are in the crosswalk; but it is just a game to them, and act like a New Yorker and continue walking, and they always give way to you. (I have not been hit once in 30 years!)
Then double back into Grand Central. Find the downtown entrance from Grand Central (from the open area go to your left and follow the corridor downtown). Here you will face Park Avenue South which goes toward Greenwich Village. Across 42nd Street is a restaurant, and Park Avenue is on either side. A couple of blocks downtown from Grand Central is the Turtle Bay area, a quaint and elegant neighborhood -- reminiscent of areas of London. There are stately townhouses (brownstones in Manhattan parlance) alongside apartment buildings. You might be a block or two from the commercial areas of Manhattan but you feel far removed!
East of Grand Central, “toward the East River” for natives, brings you to the UN area, with many newly-constructed apartment buildings, and a consulate here and there. But, on your walking tour, be sure to check out Tudor City which is downtown from 42nd Street between First and Second (that is First Avenue, but NYers never add the Avenue). Tudor City is a collection of brick apartment buildings built 2 stories above the street. It is an enclave all to its own, with wrought iron fences setting it off from the rest of the busy Manhattan world. Walk around and feel as if you have stepped into a different time era!
Walk up First [Avenue] to 50th Street, and there is a whole new unique neighborhood. Here, you will find the Sutton Place neighborhood, and you can feel the wealth of times past. There is a lot of building being done here and razing of the older buildings, but the old upper-class, moneyed elite air still remains, with an art deco building here and there. And intermixed here and there are the 5th floor walk-ups -- how do any of these tenants walk up with bags of food??
And, if your feet allow, walk down 53rd Street toward Third [Avenue] and enter into the Citicorp Atrium to chill out. There is a number of food choices, both fast food and sit down, and you just might be lucky enough to be there when live piano music echoes from the multi-story open area. Here you are, two block from Sutton Place, and you are back into the commercial area and the 21st Century. Leave on the Lexington side, walk a block to Park [Avenue]. Face downtown and walk back to Grand Central toward the 230 Park building at the end of the Avenue, savorying the bustle of the NY commercial area, and just imagine if the people you pass are lawyers, bankers or into real estate. If you arre lucky enough to be there in December, enjoy the chill in the air and anticipate the Christmas spirit with the holiday lights brightening Park Avenue.
Explore Manhattan by foot and experience the excitement of current times and ages past!
About the author:
After having lived in NY for years, Susan now lives in Venice, California. Her hobbies are biking, hiking, dancing, and, of course, web design and php web development with her blogging website, http://www.ladyblogger-susan.com
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