
New York City Guide
Key Facts
- Located on the Atlantic coast of NE United States
- Empire State Building is one of the 7th Wonders of the Modern World
- Average 47 million tourists per year enjoy New York city breaks
- 39 theatres in the Broadway district
- Birthplace of numerous cultural movements
- 5 boroughs: Manhattan, Brooklyn, The Bronx, Queens, Staten Island
New York tourist attractions
- Empire State Building
- Statue of Liberty
- Times Square
- Ellis Island
- Broadway theatres
- Luxury shopping on Fifth Avenue and at Macy's
- Museum of Modern Art
- Central Park
- Metropolitan Museum of Art

- The Guggenheim Museum
Climate
- Humid subtropical climate
- Averages 234 days each year with sunshine.
- Winters are cold, wet and windy, although warmer than inland cities
- Spring and autumn are mild and not humid
- Summers are typically hot and humid, averaging 24.7ºC
History
Originally home to the Lenape Native Americans, New York was
founded as a commercial fur trading post by the Dutch in 1624;
Manhattan island was bought for 60 Guilders - $1,000. It was called
New Amsterdam until 1664 when the colony came under English
control. The American Revolution's largest battle was fought in
modern day Brooklyn.
New York was the US capital from 1785 to 1790. In 1789, George
Washington, the first President of the United States, was
inaugurated here. By the 19th century, immigration and development
had transformed the city. It had become the centre of the
anti-slavery movement with the largest African American community
migrating from the American South, and the Great Irish Famine
brought Irish immigrants; by 1860 1 in 4 New Yorkers had been born
in Ireland.
Following the Great Depression and World War 11, New York
displaced Paris as the centre of world art. During Prohibition in
the 1920s and 30s, the economic boom resulted in the growth of
skyscrapers, becoming the world's first megacity. Wall Street in
Lower Manhattan competes with London to be the financial centre of
the world. Today, as many as 800 languages are spoken here. It is
home to 8.4 million people and has been the United State's largest
city for over 100 years.
Must-see
attractions
What to do in New York: Empire State Building, Rockefeller Centre,
Museum of Modern Art, Central Park, Times Square, Macy's, Fifth
Avenue, Madison Square Garden, Metropolitan Museum of Art, The
Guggenheim Museum, United Nations, Ellis Island, Statue of Liberty,
Broadway shows.
Culture
What to do in New York? The vibrant cultural scene offers you
endless choice. It excels in art, cuisine, dance, music, opera,
theatre, independent film, fashion, museums and literature. New
York is the birthplace of many significant cultural movements
including abstract expressionist art in the 1950s and hip hop music
in the 1970s. 39 of the largest theatres are collectively known as
"Broadway" around the glittering Times Square. The food culture
includes almost all world cuisines, brought here by the city's
continuous stream of immigrants over 400 years. It's most famous
for bagels and New York style cheesecake and pizza.
Events in annual calendar
Plan your New York City Short Breaks to coincide with exciting
annual events such as Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade, St. Patrick's
Day Parade, Tribeca Film Festival and the Halloween Parade in
Greenwich Village. Every winter there is ice-skating in Central
Park.
Geography
Halfway between Washington D.C. and Boston, New York located at
the mouth of the Hudson River and the city is built on the three
islands of Manhattan, Staten Island and Long Island. Much land has
been reclaimed since Dutch colonial times; land area is around 305
square miles or 789 square km.
Architecture
Manhattan's famous skyscrapers include several of the tallest
buildings in the world. Of nearly 6,000 high rise buildings, 50 are
over 656 feet (200m), only second to Hong Kong. Noteworthy styles
include the Gothic revival style such as the Woolworth building
built in 1913. The tapered styles of the Art Deco Chrysler Building
(built in 1930) and Empire State Building were prompted by the 1916
Zoning Resolution to allow more daylight to reach the streets. New
York's residential districts are defined by the classic Brownstones
and tenements built from 1870 to 1930.
Transport
It's quick and easy to travel around to see New York tourist
attractions. With more than 50% of New Yorkers not owning cars,
public transport is extensive and efficient featuring the Subway
system, bus network, railways and Amtrak intercity rail. Yellow
taxicabs are everywhere. Nearby airports include Newark Liberty
International Airport and LaGuardia Airport.
External links
www.nycgo.com -
official tourism website
wikitravel.org/en/New_York_City - travel guide
from Wikitravel





