thePITman;652377 wrote:My girlfriend and I are going on a 5-day vacation at the end of April, part of which includes New York City. I would appreciate input on the following:
1) Where should I say in NYC? What area(s) in/around New York have the cheapest hotels and/or the best access to the city?
2) What are the main attractions, in order, that we must see? i.e. Ground Zero, Central Park, etc.
3) What is the easiest way to commute to/from/in New York City once at our hotel? Metro? Cab? My own car? Cost of Metro/Cab?
4) What would you do differently if you went back to NYC?
5) What parts of NYC should we absolutely avoid?
6) If I drive my car into the city, where is a good place to park to leave my car during our day on the town?
Here is our tentative itinerary:
Wed, 4/27 - Leave early for Washington, DC. Spend the day & night in DC.
Thu, 4/28 - Leave DC around noon-ish for New York City, arrive at NYC, get hotel, etc.
Fri-Sun, 4/29-5/1 - Explore NYC and leave for home sometime around noon-ish Sunday. (We both work Monday)
Thank you for any comments & suggestions.
From an outsider who spent an entire summer living in NYC:
(1) Upper East side. It ain't cheap, but there's nothing like the Upper East side.
(2) Don't waste your time going to see Ground Zero. There is honestly nothing you can see. Hold off on this until the memorial is erected. THEN go see it.
i) Central Park
ia) Magnolia Bakery -- THE most delicious cupcake you will ever have
ii)Time Square
iii) Don't pay for a tourist boat trip to the Statue of Liberty. Simply take the Staten Island Ferry (it's free... and half the wait) and it gets you just about as close as the tourist boats do.
iv) China Town - there's nothing like it
v) the Apple iPod store is unreal
vi) Wall Street and the "bull"
vii) Empire State building (rooftop) -- but don't get suckered in by one of those "we'll expedite you to the top" type deals
viii) Metropolitan Museum of Art (in the Upper East Side, then cut through Central Park while there) --- if you pay more than a $1 you're a fool. The prices say SUGGESTED.... aka you don't have to pay the listed price. One of NYC's biggest traps.
3) Cabs are the easiest. Metro is the cheapest (and best way especially if you are going long distance; only take the Cab if you are going a few blocks).
4) Go see a Broadway Show
5) Anything above 100
6) Nowhere. DO NOT DRIVE YOUR CAR INTO THE CITY. You will VASTLY regret it.