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New York
City
comprises
the
central
island
of
Manhattan
along
with
four
outer
boroughs
-
Brooklyn,
Queens,
the
Bronx
, and
Staten
Island
.
Manhattan,
to many,
is
New York
-
whatever
your
interests,
it's
here
that
you'll
spend
the most
time and
are
likely
to stay.
New York
is very
much a
city of
neighborhoods
and is
best
explored
on foot.
Offshore,
the
Statue
of
Liberty
and
Ellis
Island
comprise
the
first
section
of New
York
(and
America)
that
most
nineteenth-century
immigrants
would
have
seen.
The
Financial
District
takes in
the
skyscrapers
and
historic
buildings
of
Manhattan's
southern
reaches
and was
hardest
hit by
the
destruction
of
perhaps
its most
famous
landmarks,
the Twin
Towers
of the
World
Trade
Center.
Just
northeast
is the
area
around
City
Hall
, New
York's
well-appointed
municipal
center,
which
adjoins
TriBeCa
, known
for its
swanky
restaurants,
galleries,
and
nightlife.
Moving
east,
Chinatown
is
Manhattan's
most
populous
ethnic
neighborhood,
a
vibrant
locale
that's
great
for food
and
shopping.
Nearby,
Little
Italy
bears
few
traces
of the
once-strong
immigrant
presence,
while
the
Lower
East
Side
, the
city's
traditional
gateway
neighborhood
for new
immigrants,
is
nowadays
scattered
with
trendy
bars and
clubs.
To the
west,
SoHo
is one
of the
premier
districts
for
galleries
and the
commercial
art
scene,
not to
mention
designer
shopping.
Continuing
north,
the
West
and
East
Villages
form a
focus of
bars,
restaurants,
and
shops
catering
to
students
and
would-be
bohemians
- and of
course
tourists.
Chelsea
is a
largely
residential
neighborhood
that is
now
mostly
known
for its
gay
scene
and art
galleries
that
borders
on
Manhattan's
old
Garment
District
.
Murray
Hill
contains
the
city's
largest
skyscraper
and most
enduring
symbol,
the
Empire
State
Building
.
Beyond
42nd
Street
, the
main
east-west
artery
of
midtown,
the
character
of the
city
changes
quite
radically,
and the
skyline
becomes
more
high-rise
and home
to some
of New
York's
most awe-inspiring,
neck-cricking
architecture.
There
are also
some
superb
museums
and the
city's
best
shopping
as you
work
your way
north up
Fifth
Avenue
as far
as 59th
Street.
Here,
the
classic
Manhattan
vistas
are
broken
by the
broad
expanse
of
Central
Park
, a
supreme
piece of
nineteenth-century
landscaping,
without
which
life in
Manhattan
would be
unthinkable.
Flanking
the park,
the
mostly
residential
and
fairly
affluent
Upper
West
Side
boasts
Lincoln
Center,
Manhattan's
temple
to the
performing
arts,
the
American
Museum
of
Natural
History,
and
Riverside
Park
along
the
Hudson
River.
On the
other
side of
the park,
the
Upper
East
Side
is
wealthier
and more
grandiose,
with its
nineteenth-century
millionaires'
mansions
now
transformed
into a
string
of
magnificent
museums
known as
the
"Museum
Mile,"
the most
prominent
being
the vast
Metropolitan
Museum
of Art
.
Alongside
is a
patrician
residential
neighborhood
that
boasts
some of
the
swankiest
addresses
in
Manhattan,
and a
nest of
designer
shopping
along
Madison
Avenue
in the
seventies.
Immediately
above
Central
Park,
Harlem
, the
historic
black
city-within-a-city,
has a
healthy
sense of
an
improving
go-ahead
community;
a jaunt
further
north is
most
likely
required
only to
see the
unusual
Cloisters,
a
nineteenth-century
mock-up
of a
medieval
monastery,
packed
with
great
European
Romanesque
and
Gothic
art and
(transplanted)
architecture.
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