6 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.

9/11 Memorial & Museum

Financial District Fodor's Choice
NEW YORK - MAY 27: NYC's 9/11 Memorial at World Trade Center Ground Zero seen on May 27, 2013. The memorial is located at the World Trade Center site, on the former location of the Twin Towers
(c) Marcorubino | Dreamstime.com

Opened in 2011 to mark the 10th anniversary of the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, the somber 9/11 Memorial is an open-access, free public plaza occupying much of the 16-acre World Trade Center site. It comprises two giant, recessed square footprints lined with 30-foot-tall waterfalls marking where the Twin Towers once stood. Edging the memorial pools are bronze panels inscribed with the names of the nearly 3,000 people who were killed in the 1993 and 2001 terrorist attacks. Around the plaza are benches, grassy strips, and more than 400 swamp white oak trees harvested from within a 500-mile radius of the site, as well as from Pennsylvania and the Washington, D.C., area. Be sure to stop at the remarkable Callery pear "Survivor Tree" that, rather miraculously, withstood the 2001 attacks and was nurtured back to health.

Along Liberty Street on the south side of the site is the elevated Liberty Park, home to Fritz Koenig's The Sphere, which for three decades stood on the plaza at the World Trade Center as a symbol of peace. Damaged in the 2001 attacks, the sculpture was installed in the park in 2017. On the park's east end stands St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church and National Shrine ( stnicholaswtc.org), erected to replace the church that was destroyed on 9/11. Unlike an average church, this house of worship cost $85 million, took 21 years to design and construct, and among its splendid features, was built with white marble sourced from the same Greek quarry as the Parthenon's stone. Visitors are welcome daily (except Tuesday), 10–3.

Beside the twin pools that form the 9/11 Memorial Plaza is the glass pavilion of the 9/11 Memorial Museum. The museum descends some seven stories down to the Twin Towers' original bedrock foundations, and the vast space displays a poignant, powerful collection of artifacts, memorabilia, photographs, and multimedia exhibits, as well as a gallery that takes visitors through the history of events surrounding both the 1993 and 2001 attacks. You might appreciate the tissue boxes around the museum when beholding the memorial wall with portraits and personal stories of those who perished. There's a panoramic media installation about the site's "rebirth," as well as World Trade Center–related art and history exhibits that change throughout the year. Giant pieces of the towers' structural steel and foundations are displayed, along with the partially destroyed Ladder Company 3 fire truck. You can also see the remnants of the Survivors Stairs, which allowed hundreds of people to escape the buildings that fateful September day. (Check the website for current ticket packages and other discounts.)

180 Greenwich St., New York, NY, 10007, USA
212-266–5211-general information
Sight Details
Memorial is free; museum admission $36

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Tenement Museum

Lower East Side Fodor's Choice
The Tenement Museum located on the lower east side of Manhattan. Among other things, the museum has recreated-preserved living and working spaces to show what tenement life was like spanning the turn of the of the century (latter half of 1800's to early pa
wdstock / iStockphoto

For a step back to various points in time on the Lower East Side, book one of the experiences that revolve around the partially restored 19th-century buildings that comprise the Tenement Museum. Options include apartment tours, neighborhood walks (including "Reclaiming Black Lives" introduced in 2021), and informative talks. At 97 Orchard Street, theme tours take you through the preserved apartments of several generations of immigrants who lived in the building. The "Hard Times" tour visits the homes of Natalie Gumpertz, a German–Jewish dressmaker (dating from 1878), and Adolph and Rosaria Baldizzi, Catholic immigrants from Sicily (1935). "Sweatshop Workers" visits the Levine family's garment shop–apartment and the home of the Rogarshevsky family from Eastern Europe (1918), while "Irish Outsiders" explores the life of the Moores, an Irish American family living in the building in 1869. Nearby, at 103 Orchard Street, the Under One Roof exhibition explores the lives of immigrant families from Poland, China, and Puerto Rico who lived in the building after World War II. All the tours fill up fast so it's best to sign up in advance.

103 Orchard St., New York, NY, 10002, USA
877-975–3786
Sight Details
Most tours $30 (not all allow children under 5)

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Stonewall National Monument Visitor Center

Greenwich Village Fodor's Choice

Opened in June 2024, the Stonewall National Monument Visitor Center on Christopher Street is an information hub and an immersive exhibition on the Gay Rights movement that started right next door at the Stonewall Inn during the June 1969 Stonewall Riots when LGBTQ+ patrons fought back against one of the police department's routine raids, ultimately galvanizing America's homosexual civil-rights movement. You can spend time in the info center learning about how the movement started and progressed and then move next door to the historic bar, literally drinking in the history of the place via a beer or cocktail among the friendly locals and visitors who frequent the place. The bar is open nightly until late.

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African Burial Ground National Monument

Financial District

Often overlooked due to its location amid downtown’s Civic Center courthouses and high-rises, this powerful, compact site is well worth a visit to learn about a lesser-known part of New York’s colonial history. The African Burial Ground National Monument commemorates what was once a 6-acre cemetery, discovered in 1991 when an archaeological study for a new development revealed more than 15,000 intact skeletal remains of enslaved and free Africans. Today, visitors can view the 24-foot-high Ancestral Chamber and the large Circle of the Diaspora, each made of stone from Africa and North America, adorned with African symbols, and designed with symbolic details that honor those who were laid to rest at the site. On the other side of the block, the visitor center features the “Reclaiming Our History” exhibit, details about the work and life of African people in early New York, and the 20th-century community success that preserved the burial ground. The memorial was proclaimed a national monument in 2006 in a ceremony presided over by former mayor Michael Bloomberg and poet Maya Angelou. The visitor center is located at 290 Broadway and the Outdoor Monument is located on the corner of Duane Street and African Burial Ground Way (Elk Street).

290 Broadway, New York, NY, 10007, USA
212-238–4367
Sight Details
Free
Closed Sun. and Mon.

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Federal Hall National Memorial

Financial District

It's a museum now, but this Federal Hall is monumental as the "birthplace of American Government." George Washington was sworn in here as the first president of the United States, in 1789—you can even view the bible Washington used to swear his oath (on the first floor). The museum covers 400 years of New York City's history, with a focus on the life and times of what is now the city's Financial District. You can spot the building easily—it was modeled on the Parthenon, and a 12½-foot-tall statue of George Washington stands proudly on its (south-facing) stately steps.

26 Wall St., New York, NY, 10005, USA
212-825–6990
Sight Details
Free
Closed weekends

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Ten House

Financial District

Just across Liberty Street from the World Trade Center site, the “Ten House” firehouse is officially known as Ladder Company 10 and Engine Company 10. On the morning of September 11, 2001, firefighters on duty here were among the first to respond to New York’s terrorist attacks. The companies lost six heroes that day. The “Ten House Bravest Memorial” stands inside the firehouse to commemorate their ultimate sacrifice and that of other Ten House heroes. Around the corner on Greenwich Street, the 56-foot-long bronze bas-relief FDNY Memorial Wall serves as a tribute to 343 firefighters who perished on 9/11.