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It’s okay to admit that sometimes you need a break from the rise and grind of New York City. While winter brings with it a plethora of snow-covered destinations, summertime in the city brings with
Summer Streets is an annual event organized during the month of August in the streets of New York City since 2008. [3] During the mornings of the first three Saturdays in August, 20 miles (32.2 km) of streets (including Park Avenue and Lafayette Street in Manhattan between 109th Street and Brooklyn Bridge) are open for walkers, runners, and cyclists and closed for motor vehicles. [3]
College Park: Cole Field House: 5 February 1977 New York City: Madison Square Garden: 6 February 1977 Uniondale: Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum: 8 February 1977 Syracuse: Onondaga County War Memorial Auditorium: 9 February 1977 Boston: Boston Garden: 10 February 1977 Providence: Providence Civic Center: 11 February 1977 Philadelphia ...
Pool Parties / ˌ p uː l ˈ p ɑːr t iː s / was a summer series of free outdoor concerts that took place in an abandoned olympic-size swimming pool in McCarren Park in Greenpoint, Brooklyn from 2006 to 2008 and at the East River State Park in Williamsburg, Brooklyn from 2009 to 2010. [1] The music festival hosted more than 200,000 people ...
When it first opened in 2022, I jumped at the chance to check it out myself that summer. A year later, I returned to explore the spa’s new winter features (like the QCirque of Wonders ...
A morning commuter sits on a bench at the ferry terminal in Jersey City, N.J. looking at the lower Manhattan skyline on a cloudless day in New York City, Thursday, Aug. 18, 2022. (AP Photo/J ...
A Harlem Cultural Festival was first proposed in 1964 to bring life to the Harlem neighborhood. [3] At the same time, in the mid-1960s, nightclub singer Tony Lawrence began working on community initiatives in Harlem, initially for local churches, but from 1966 working under New York City Mayor John Lindsay and Parks Commissioner August Heckscher.
Surprise Lake Camp is a non-profit sleepaway camp located on over 400 acres (1.6 km 2) in North Highlands, New York (approximately 60 miles (97 km) north of New York City). It is the oldest Jewish summer camp in the United States. [1]