things to do while in New York

RayRayJones

Forum Member
My wife and I are planning a trip to got to a Tigers and Yankees game in New York in April. This is the first time that either of us have been to New York. Just wondering if anyone has any suggestions on the best things to visit while were not at the game. We will be there for 3 days total. Thanks
 
If you are flying and you go a day early, you can see the Marlins and Mets on Thursday @ 1:00PM. That way you'll see a game at Citi Field too.

Other places...

Statue of Liberty & Ellis Island
9-11 Memorial
Times Square
Rockefeller Center
Central Park
Coney Island
USS Enterprise
See a Broadway play/show
Empire State Building
Metropolitan Museum of Art
Greenwich Village
Carnegie Hall
Brooklyn Bridge
Day trip to Long Island
 
We did the Statue of Liberty, Ellis Island, and the USS Intrepid. In one day.
We weren't taking our time, but we didn't miss much!!!

The Metropolitan Musem of Art deserves a full day by itself.
 
The area around Yankee Stadium is uninteresting as far as tourist interests. Don't underestimate the scale of the city when planning your trip- one NYC mile is like ten elsewhere. Likewise, $10 in NYC is like $1 elsewhere. Assuming your game is on day 2 of your trip. . .

Selecting a hotel in NYC is like playing roulette. I like the Cosmopolitan Hotel in Tribeca. www.cosmohotel.com I've stayed there a couple times and never paid over $200/night. It's a great area for walking- Battery Park (great views of Statue of Liberty), Brooklyn Bridge (good ice cream and Manhattan views on the Brooklyn side), financial district/Ground Zero, and Chinatown are nearby. If your wife likes knock-off purses, she'll love the vendors in Chinatown.

At minimum, go to Times Square at night. Restaurant choices pretty much suck there (except Stage Deli) as they're all chain/touristy shit. IMO, must explore neighborhoods for shopping, food, entertainment, people watching- East Village, Greenwich Village (Grace Church if you like gothic churches), West Village.
 
I just spent the last few days there, as my GF recently moved to New Jersey for her new job in Manhattan.

The city is filthy, everything costs money, and just about everybody you deal with will try to short change you. If you pay for something, expect to get the wrong change back (less). I always count my money but my GF got suckered her first day by a taxi driver who then sped off.

I took a taxi from 26th st in Manhattan to the airport and it cost me $40.

The transit system isn't too expensive ($30 for unlimited 7 days, buses and subway), but it's a pain in the ass getting anywhere. I swear we spent the majority of the trip on a bus, walking to a bus, or waiting for a bus. Getting anywhere using bus systems is cheap but it takes forever.

TV glorifies this stuff and makes it looks so nice but in reality there is garbage all over the streets. Literally, they do not use dumpsters, they just throw bags of garbage onto the sidewalk piled 3' high and stretching as far as 15'. This is why the city has a rat infestation problem. Apparently bed bugs are a problem in the city cause there are signs in every subway station, bus, train, etc... I have to say it was shocking to see a dealership that had all new Porsche's, Maybach's, Ferrarri's, and Bentleys in Manhattan in what looked like a ghetto. It was very strange. I went all over Manhattan and did not see a single area that looked as nice as what I've seen in movies and on tv.

Everywhere is packed and you wait for everything.

I know I'm doing a lot of bitching but NYC just wasn't at all what I thought it would be. I really didn't enjoy myself all too much as it seemed like we didn't get to do much due to the time it takes to get around.

Don't get me started on Jersey. She left her car here in MI and Jersey really isn't set up for transit. A trip to Ikea on saturday consisted of catching a 1:05pm bus, connecting to another bus, which then took us right to the ikea, shopped for 2.5 hours, then got back home by 8pm.

That's right, a trip to Ikea is an all day event in Jersey if you don't have a car. On the return trip home from Ikea we took our first bus, then had to walk 3 blocks to our next bus and that is a bus that comes once per hour so we waited in the cold for 45 minutes for it and that bus took us to her street, and dropped us off about 3 blocks from her house.

I was lugging about 60 pounds of bags around the entire time.

NYC moves faster with the transit but getting anywhere is all pretty much the same as far as connecting buses and trains. You walk and wait.

I am going to see her again at the end of the month but I think I'm going to drive because she has free parking where she lives (weehawken, NJ).

I know this isn't what you asked about but I'm in the mood to rant.

I left her apartment at 10am, got to Manhattan by 11:15, ate lunch with her and left at noon to go to the airport. To ensure that I made it on time, I took a $40 taxi cab to take me 12 miles to the airport. The cab ride took 40 minutes, I checked in online, but getting to my gate took forever, I got picked out of the line by security for a search and missed my flight.

Spirit gave me another flight for free because my plane left earlier than scheduled. I got to the gate at 1pm, and they had already left even though the departure wasn't until 1:20 so I had to spend 4 hours at La Guardia airport which is filthy, so I have been in a terrible anti NY ranting mood all day.
 
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