TIMES SQUARE
Times Square is the area where Broadway crosses 7th Avenue between 42 and 47 streets. You’ll enjoy multiple theaters there.
ROCKFELLER CENTER
The Rockefeller Center is most widely known for being the stage of the most famous Christmas tree, but the attractions go far beyond it.
There are dozens of stores, options of restaurants and the cafés are also enjoyable in winter, when you want to get rid from the cold a little, before trying the ice skating ring.
BROOKLYN BRIDGE
It’s the oldest New York’s bridge, open back in 1883.
EMPIRE STATE BUILDING
It is now the tallest New York building, the seventh in the world. Watching the city atop its observatory is something you just can’t miss.
Make it on a sunny day, when you will be able to enjoy a vista almost 90 miles away.
STATUE OF LIBERTY
The Statue of Liberty was a donation by the French people to the Americans over 100 years ago, recognizing the friendship established during the American Revolution. With the passing years that friendship also symbolizes freedom and democracy.
CENTRAL PARK
This is New York’s sanctuary: a magnificent 337-acre garden with lakes, sports areas (like ice skating rings, tennis and baseball courts, jogger track, among others) and cultural spaces. It’s right in the heart of Manhattan, at New York’s financial center.
BROOKLYN BRIDGE
Considered the eighth wonder of the world when opened back in 1883, the bridge is an engineering masterpiece, with its suspension cables and a great view from New York, connecting Manhattan to Brooklyn, over the East River.
SOHO
That’s where art galleries, famous stores and boutiques are located, selling most curious precious items. Highlight for its cast iron architecture with lofts where artists live.
BROADWAY MUSICALS
Here are the most famous musicals. Broadway tastes like New York. More than 50 musical shows are staged during the year for the tourists’ delirium, their predominant audience. The most traditional are: The Phantom of the Opera, King Lear, Chicago, Mamma Mia and the Blue Man Group.
|