12 Best Sights in New York City, New York

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We've compiled the best of the best in New York City - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Stuyvesant Heights

Fodor's Choice
More than 8,000 Victorian brownstones and row houses line the streets of Bed-Stuy, 825 of which fall in the landmarked historic district of Stuyvesant Heights. MacDonough Street and Stuyvesant Avenue are highlights. You can see some of the best buildings if you stroll east on MacDonough, starting at Lewis Avenue. Pass the 1860s Italianate brownstone that’s now Akwaaba Luxury B&B (347 MacDonough) and turn right onto Stuyvesant Avenue. Just south of Bainbridge Street, on the west side, are two gorgeous white mansions.

75½ Bedford Street

Rising real-estate prices inspired the construction of New York City's narrowest house—just 9½ feet wide and 32 feet deep—in 1873. Built on a lot that was originally a carriage entrance of the Isaacs-Hendricks House next door, this sliver of a building has illustrious past residents including actor John Barrymore and poet Edna St. Vincent Millay.

75½ Bedford St., New York, NY, 10014, USA

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Bay Ridge Architecture Tour

Bay Ridge has no shortage of eclectic architecture. Wandering the neighborhood, you'll see everything from one of the oldest freestanding Greek Revival homes in Brooklyn (99th Street and Shore Road) to circa-1880 Shingle-style Victorians with conical towers (81st and 82nd streets, between 3rd and Colonial avenues); rows of limestone houses on Bay Ridge Parkway (lit by working gas lamps); and charming cul-de-sacs lined with redbrick, slate-roof homes (68th Street between Ridge Boulevard and 3rd Avenue). The most popular architectural attraction in the neighborhood, though, is the fanciful Arts and Crafts home known to locals as the Gingerbread House. Built for shipping magnate Howard E. Jones in 1917, the 6,000-square-foot private home at 8220 Narrows Avenue has a thatched-style shingle roof, rustic stonework, and abundant landscaped greenery that make it look like it came straight out of a Hans Christian Andersen story.
8220 Narrows Ave., Brooklyn, NY, 11209, USA

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Recommended Fodor's Video

Dean Street

Crown Heights
Few residential streets in Crown Heights are as beautiful as Dean Street (especially between Bedford and New York avenues). Unique brownstones reflect Italianate, Edwardian, Victorian, and Renaissance Revival styles. Walking east from Bedford, take note of several wood-frame houses starting at No. 1208, which date back to the 1860s. At the corner of Dean and New York Avenue, compare the two churches across the street from one another: the neo-Byzantine Hebron French-speaking Seventh-day Adventist Church and the redbrick Union United Methodist Church.
Brooklyn, NY, USA

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Edgar Allan Poe Cottage

Fordham

Although American author and poet Edgar Allan Poe was born in Boston, his final home was a cottage in the village of Fordham—now a neighborhood of the Bronx—where he lived with his young wife Virginia and her mother Maria Clemm. The 19th-century cottage has since been moved to a small green space now known as Poe Park, where it was restored and opened to the public in 2011 for literary and history buffs. You can learn all about the macabre writer who popularized the word "nevermore" with an audio tour by the Bronx County Historical Society.

Gracie Mansion

Upper East Side

Built as a country retreat by Scottish-born shipping magnate Archibald Gracie in 1799, when New York City ended much farther downtown, Gracie Mansion was made the official residence of the city's mayors in 1942. The first mayoral resident, Fiorello LaGuardia, dubbed it the "Little White House." More recently, former mayor Michael Bloomberg stayed in his own town house nearby while pouring millions into renovating the house and turning the first floor into a museum reflecting the city's history and diversity. Some mayors were hesitant about moving into Gracie Mansion; Eric Adams, the current mayor, has publicly said that the mansion is haunted, but he has been focusing on making "the People's House" more experiential to visitors. Public tours of the building are offered on Monday at 10:30 am, noon, and 1:30 pm and to private and school groups on Wednesday. Reservations must be made online; plan at least a month in advance, if possible.

East End Ave., New York, NY, 10028, USA
212-676–3060
Sight Details
$10
Closed Tues. and Thurs.–Sun.

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Hamilton Grange National Memorial

Harlem

Catching Hamilton on Broadway isn't the only way to learn about the famed Founding Father. Alexander Hamilton and his wife raised eight kids in this Federal-style country home, which he called his "sweet project." Once located on Hamilton's 32 acres, the Grange, named after his father's childhood home in Scotland, has moved three times since it was built in 1802. It now stands in St. Nicholas Park and gives a lesson in Hamilton's life, from his birth in the West Indies and his appointment as the nation's first Secretary of the Treasury to his authorship of The Federalist Papers and his death following a duel with Vice President Aaron Burr. The house's ground floor, formerly servants' quarters, hosts an interactive exhibit that includes a short film on Hamilton's life. Tours include views of the parlor, study, dining room, and two guest rooms. Note the beautiful piano, which belonged to his daughter, Angelica.

414 W. 141st St., New York, NY, 10031, USA
646-548–2310
Sight Details
Free
Closed Mon. and Tues.
Tours are free and available on a first-come, first-serve basis

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Judd Foundation

SoHo

A five-story cast-iron building from 1870, 101 Spring Street was the New York home and studio of minimalist artist Donald Judd. Although SoHo used to be home to many single-use cast-iron buildings, this designated historic building is one of the few that remain. Judd bought it in 1968, and today, guided 75-minute tours (book online, as early as possible, since tours sell out weeks in advance) explore his living and working spaces, offset with art installations arranged prior to his death in 1994. Note that climbing five flights of stairs is required and photos aren’t allowed.

101 Spring St., New York, NY, 10012, USA
212-219–2747
Sight Details
$35
Closed Sun., Mon., and Thurs.

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Louis Armstrong House Museum

Corona

For the last 28 years of his life, the famed jazz musician lived in this modest three-story house with his wife, Lucille. Take a 40-minute guided tour (reservations required in advance; departs on the hour, last tour at 3 pm), which are limited to 10 guests per tour. Note the difference between the rooms vividly decorated by Lucille in charming mid-century style and Louis's dark den, cluttered with phonographs and reel-to-reel tape recorders.

34--56 107th St., Queens, NY, 11368, USA
718-478–8274
Sight Details
$10
Closed Sun.–Wed.

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Merchant's House Museum

East Village

Built in 1832, this redbrick house, combining Federal and Greek Revival styles, provides a glimpse into the domestic life of the period 30 years before the Civil War. Retired merchant Seabury Tredwell and his descendants lived here from 1835 until 1933. The home became a museum in 1936, with the original furnishings and architectural features preserved; family memorabilia are on display. The fourth-floor servants' bedroom, where the family's staff slept and did some of their work, offers a look at the lives of Irish domestics in the mid-1800s. Guided tours are at noon, cover all five floors and the rear garden, and last about 75 minutes.

29 E. 4th St., New York, NY, 10003, USA
212-777–1089
Sight Details
From $15
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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Morris-Jumel Mansion

Washington Heights

Manhattan's oldest surviving house was built in 1765 for the Morris family, on the ancestral homeland of the Lenape people, and if walls could talk, this house would have stories. In fact, it has songs: Lin Manuel-Miranda composed part of Hamilton here. This National Historic Landmark once served as headquarters to General George Washington and then the British military and Hessian troops during the American Revolutionary War. It survived the Battle of Harlem Heights in 1776 and a few months later, its barn held American prisoners after the Battle of Fort Washington. At war's end, the house was confiscated, and for a while it lived a life as a tavern and rest stop for travelers. In the early 1800s, the house was owned by wealthy French merchant Stephen Jumel, who spent time restoring the house while living out of wedlock for several years before marrying a woman of no station who spent a lot of money trying to be accepted by New York society. The home welcomed such notable figures as Louis Philippe (King of France), Joseph Bonaparte (elder brother of Napoléon Bonaparte), and Henry Clay. When Jumel died and left everything to his wife, she married Aaron Burr. Yes, that Aaron Burr. She divorced him after four months after he made a dent in her bank account. Today the house is a museum with eight period rooms on display, fine furnishings and portraits, beautiful architecture, and all those stories to tell.  Call ahead to confirm access while the building undergoes exterior restoration work and accessibility upgrades throughout 2025 and 2026.

65 Jumel Terr., New York, NY, 10032, USA
212-923–8008
Sight Details
From $10
Closed Mon.

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Victorian Flatbush House Tour

This biannual self-guided tour happens on even-numbered years and gives design and architecture buffs a look inside turn-of-the-century masterpieces. The event takes place, rain or shine, from 1 to 6 pm on the Sunday before Father's Day. You can go at your own pace and walk the entire route or use the shuttle bus. The tour starts at Temple Beth Emeth of Flatbush, where you can purchase or pick up tickets and collect the detailed guidebook and map.