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Old 10-22-2009, 07:57 PM   #16
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MOMA has a fabulous gift shop, the kind of place that even dedicated non-shoppers will like. Free to look, though it might end up costing you in the end.

I've heard there are excellent walking tours in Harlem, maybe longer than works for your knees. You could also visit the part of the Met museum that's at the northern end of Manhattan, the one that looks like a castle. We did a nice self-guided and free walking tour of Morningside Heights, looking at Grant's Tomb and the Cathedral Church of St. John and stopping for hungarian pastries along the way. The Manhattan chowhound board has a lower east side walking tour. Add on the Doughnut Plant if you do this.
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Old 10-22-2009, 08:05 PM   #17
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I agree with the museum suggestions. But if you want REALLY cheap fun I can suggest sitting at the Battery watching traffic on the Hudson ... or take the Staten Island ferry across New York Harbor ... or shop street vendors outside the old Customs House ... or people watch in Grand Central Station (or 42nd Ave if you're so inclined) ....
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Old 10-22-2009, 08:26 PM   #18
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Adding to pageturner's post....
We do a Lower East Side noshing tour
In addition to Economy Candy, we make stops at the Doughnut Plant, Kossar's Bialys and the Pickle Guys. Kossar's and Pickle Guys are probably closed on Saturdays...
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Old 10-22-2009, 08:45 PM   #19
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Quote:
Don't know a thing about the Metropolitan Museum of Modern Art
Just to clarify, there are two museums: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, one of the great museums of the world, and MoMA, which is the Museum of Modern Art (and also world-famous). I also second a trip to the Cloisters, if you're at all interested in medieval art and sculpture, or just want to visit a very peaceful and beautiful place. Because it's part of the Met, you can also pay as little as you like.
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Old 10-22-2009, 09:00 PM   #20
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Re: museums in NYC -- another vote for the Tenement Museum, it's really very special. There are also are several really amazing exhibitions on right now: Monet waterlilies at MoMA, Kandinsky at the Guggenheim, Vermeer at the Met, and an important Lincoln show at the N-Y Historical Society. Something for everyone in that selection...
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Old 10-22-2009, 09:26 PM   #21
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I vote for the Metropolitan Museum of Art. It will keep you busy for the better part of the day. You can also visit some of the interesting shopping places (and just don't buy anything). We love going to FAO Schwartz and all the other places nearby (Disney Store, etc). It's just fun. If it's just you and your husband, go down to Canal Street...it's hilarious to see all the interesting and cheap "shopping" in Chinatown. You never know...you might find the perfect whats it to buy (cheap). Go to Little Italy for lunch. There is a great place called Lunella. I've been there a few times. I would say...get a decent restaurant lunch. We do that and then get hot dogs and pretzels on the street for dinner (seriously...they are the BEST hotdogs and pretzels on the planet). The Museum of Natural History is also quite good and also can be a good chunk of the day activity. I've never been to the Tenement Museum but it's on my list of things to do. I'm a big fan of the Carnegie Deli. It's not all that inexpensive, but really the sandwiches are SO huge you can easily split one at least two ways. I would definitely take some time to walk around Grand Central Station (if you haven't done so on a previous trip). It has been restored beautifully. It's just fun to go to...you can browse in the shops. There is a food court in the lower level and there are plenty of choices of reasonable things to eat there...and great people watching.
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Old 10-22-2009, 09:39 PM   #22
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The Met is a great museum, and you don't have to feel guilty about paying what you wish. I never pay more than $1 and they really don't even notice. Or they don't say anything. You don't have to explain, just pay them something. Then you can walk down Fifth Avenue, or go a bit west to Lexington or one of the other avenues and walk around. Rockefeller Center is at about 47th Street and Fifth, so it would be about a two mile walk from 85 St. down, but it's a very nice walk. There are 20 blocks to a mile. St. Patrick's Cathedral is also close to Rockefeller Center and it's a beautiful Gothic Church. The MoMA is only free on Fridays; otherwise it's about $20. But the MoMA bookstore is very nice. It's at 53 St. between 5th and 6th Avenues.

Explore some of the other boroughs. Brooklyn is great. Take the F train all the way to the end to Coney Island, if it's a nice day. That is an experience, even in the winter, but stores there might be closed. You can go to the Brooklyn Botanical Garden, which is beautiful, or the one in the Bronx. Even in the winter, these are very nice places to visit.

Downtown Manhattan is Soho, Greenwich Village, Chinatown and Little Italy. Chinatown and Little Italy are in the same neighborhood. VERY INTERESTING. Get a map of the subway system on nyc's subway site MTA Home Page and you will find all of this stuff. Have a good time! You can ask more questions here, and lots of people will be happy to help.
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Old 10-23-2009, 12:12 AM   #23
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Off-Off-Broadway is not a location but means a smaller size theater with reasonable ticket prices. Shows can be found all over the city every night of the week.

In November, I'd recommend FluxTheatre Ensemble's newly written play about the 1960's called
"The Lesser Seductions of History." It follows the lives of ten characters, each representing one year of the decade.

Last edited by paying3tuitions; 10-23-2009 at 01:30 AM.
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Old 10-23-2009, 08:15 AM   #24
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1. The Tenement Museum is wonderful and not super-expensive; check the Web site for schedule of tours--reservations are suggested on weekends. It is a terrific destination and a nice accompaniment to walking on the Lower East Side in general, which is extremely interesting. For that neighborhood and others, check walking tour listings (in the NY Times every Friday among other sources)--there are many each weekend offered by various companies and they can be very interesting and not very expensive.

2. I also agree that the Metropolitan Museum of Art (which incidentally does have e a decent Impressionist collection but not like the Art Institute of Chicago or Musee d'Orsay) is well worth a visit. It is a world-class museum and it's fun to go there and hear so many people speaking other languages and seeiourselves as part of a tourist destination. And it is quite true that you can pay what you wish. My husband and I go fairly often but are not members, so we do have to pay each time; we find the $20 entrance fee excessive and usually pay $5 to $10 apiece and rationalize on the basis of time spent there--that is, we are only there for an hour or two and are repeat customers who pay each time, probably adding up to more income for the museum than one long visit (or so we like to think). The Greek and roman sculpture wing and the incredible courtyard in the American wing are highlights for me but they are just a small part of the whole.

3. Since you lived abroad for quite a while I don't know if the Cloisters will be as interesting for you since it is essentially bits and pieces of monasteries and such brought from Europe. Still, it is part of the Met so entrance may be covered by the same fee you pay for the Met if you go on the same day (we've never done both in one day so I am not sure). It is a wonderful setting and a great display, with beautiful views of the Hudson River--might be worth a visit for you just for the peace and loveliness if not for art discoveries.

4. MOMA is great for people who like modern art and it has some really interesting design exhibits, but I would not put it at the top of the list if it's not your favorite kind of art. (Not my favorite and not a flexible fee schedule.)

5. New-York Historical Society in conjunction with a walk around the Upper West Side. Best part to me is the collection of decorative arts and furnishingss and ephemera (forget what it is called but it is on the top floor I think.)

6. The Frick if you love traditional art museums--lovely building and lovely artworks--very civilized. And then go for a nice walk in a selected part of the Upper East Sdie admiring storefronts on Madison Avenue, townhouses on the side streets, or venture farther uptown for the lower 90s between Fifth and Third Avenues to see the Carnegie Hill neighborhood, which is just a very pretty part of the city that feels both elegant and cozy.

7. Bronx Botanical Gardens for the conservatories and if you like zoos you aren't far from the Bronx Zoo and you can visit that in the same trip--again, not superexpensive. Not Manhattan but reachable by subway.

Last edited by mattmom; 10-23-2009 at 08:24 AM.
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Old 10-23-2009, 08:36 AM   #25
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I always found the Bronx Zoo to be very expensive. The zoo is absolutely amazing if one has never been and I understand why it has to cost what it does. As expensive as it is, I find it to be well worth every penny. Still, people from out of town must get sticker shock between fees to get in, parking fees, food, fees for some attractions etc. I can't remember if there is an extra charge for the train ride, etc. I just don't want the OP to think that a visit here is nearly free (ie: the zoo in Washington DC, because it is not). The good news is that I just checked and it seems that the price of tickets go down as of 11/2 from $27 each to $15. That is a very good deal if the weather is good.
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Old 10-23-2009, 08:45 AM   #26
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Plus they won't be parking because will be going by subway, which saves the parking fee.

NYC is such a great combination of free attractions (endless places to walk and see buildings and businesses) and expensive (food, theater, lodging), with museums and the zoo and botanical gardens being the gray area. But it would likely take several full-price museum admissions to equal the cost of a seat at a Broadway or mainstream 0ff-Broadway theater even at the half-price TKTS booth! (Which reminds me that TKTS is a good thing to know about for people who want to be spontaneous about a theater ticket.)

Last edited by mattmom; 10-23-2009 at 08:50 AM.
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Old 10-23-2009, 09:11 AM   #27
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But it would likely take several full-price museum admissions to equal the cost of a seat at a Broadway or mainstream 0ff-Broadway theater even at the half-price TKTS booth!
That depends. Most Broadway shows have regular (non-discount/non-code) tickets available to every performance starting in the $40-50 range. Some are even less, e.g., one of the best current shows, Next to Normal. where you can get a seat for $36.50. Same with Off-Broadway. It depends on the show. Altar Boyz, probably the most popular and successful OB show in years, has tickets that start at $25.
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Old 10-23-2009, 09:23 AM   #28
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Your comments are all so helpful! I'm copying them into a word doc, where I can also copy official info from websites. I don't know what time we'll arrive on Saturday (we're flying with Buddy Passes, so will be at the mercy of Delta). And Wednesday will also be devoted to travel. I'm thinking that we will try to fill our days with mainly free stuff, with one paid attraction per day. My goal is to average no more than $100 per day for the 4 days, for food, attractions, and subway/taxi.

We did do TKTS last time - saw Gypsy with Patti LuPone. It was amazing, and I got her autograph afterwards, too! That was right before she got the Tony. She deserved it! But that's not in the budget this time around. (We will have one more trip to NYC in May for graduation. We'll see how much money we have left then.)

The Tenement Museum doesn't seem to be one museum, but rather several different tours, all for about $20 each, if I'm reading it right. Does anybody know the best tour or how it works?

My S mentioned that there has been lots of work on the subways and many stops are closed. So I probably need to look closely at the website for those details.
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Old 10-23-2009, 10:01 AM   #29
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Re the Tenement Museum I hvae been there two or three times; I don't think there is one "best" tour--probably the one that most fits your own family's heritage is the one that will seem best. (It is one museum, it's just that each apartment within the building is its own tour.)

The subway was really disrupted one recent weekend but I haven't heard about similar disruptions planned for future weekends this fall. The MTA Web site does provide full information about the system though--I referred to it that weekend to figure out where not to go. It seemed worse in the outer boroughs than in Manhattan though. I am a great proponent of walking in Manhattan anyway: anything within a twenty-block distance is usually pretty easy in good weather--and more if you are walkers, and it really saves subway/bus fare.
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Old 10-23-2009, 07:55 PM   #30
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Nice thread. Please count the "offs" before you dismiss theater as too expensive an evening.

Off-Broadway runs around $40-75 per ticket.

Off-Off-Broadway tickets run between $l0 and $20 apiece.

For the cost of seeing a movie, ypu can instead find an original play or musical with low production costs and much talent. Many are recent graduates of theater programs from around the country and NYC. Some are equity showcase and have highly experienced actors. The quality range is wide, so research for topics that interest you and experience of the ensemble.

Answering Binx's question about the Tenement House tour choices, I enjoyed the tour that traced three different families from three decades, all in a single tenement building. Hearing some of the stories retold, and standing in the small spaces occupied by so many people helped me imagine domestic family life in those days. The goodness of the tour rests on the storytelling ability of the guide, since there were few furnishings in a tenement apartment. Ours was a history graduate student and very good at her job!

Edit: just reread Mattmom's post above. Perhaps the tours have changed since I went 3 years ago. It sounds as though they made my tour of three apartments into three separate tours now.

More free entertainment: what are the chances of visiting Wall Street and seeing an actual arrest?

Last edited by paying3tuitions; 10-23-2009 at 08:22 PM.
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