Sunday Times

NEW YORK MADE EASY

If you’ve been there, you probably long to go back. And if you never have, it’s on your bucket list. NYC attracts 50 million tourists a year and with spectacula­r reason. It’s a cultural capital, a fertile bed for big dreams, and a non-stop party, where th

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A family-sized bite of the big toffee apple

1. GET YOUR BEARINGS

AGREAT way to narrow down your to-do list is to cram in some highlights right off the bat - and an open-top, hop-on hop-off bus is great for that — though you’ll have to factor in traffic. These will run you past the most famous landmarks, including Central Park, Times Square and the new One World Trade Centre, with commentary to clue you in as you chug from spot to spot. Several companies run such trips with multi-day options and night tours. Try bigbustour­s.com or newyorksig­htseeing.com You can also do your sightseein­g by boat.

The New York Water Taxi is delightful­ly decked out like a floating yellow cab and offers hop-on, hop-off tours from the harbour on a 90-minute loop. Thrill-seekers may prefer

The Beast, a speedboat tour that zooms up the Hudson at up to 75km/h — they recommend you wear a wetsuit. See ridethebea­st.com.

2. HEAD TO THE TOP

NYC has a skyline made for the movies. In that architectu­ral hall of fame, no one stands taller than the 102-storey Empire State building. When it opened in 1931, it was the tallest building in the world — and remained so until the mid-’70s. Today, visitors can explore the splendid art - deco lobby and the two exhibits on the lower floors before shooting up to the 102nd floor for the swoon. See esbnyc.com. Though it’s not as high, the Top of

the Rock observatio­n deck at Rockefelle­r Centre - built by the oil tycoon during the Great Depression - offers a ride on a glass-ceiled sky shuttle to the 70th floor, for stunning open-air, 360-degree views.

3. ISLAND HOP

Manhattan is the Big Apple’s core island but there are a few others worth a look. Liberty

Island and Ellis Island, both of which fall under US National Parks. Liberty is, of course. home to that colossal, thorny-crowned statue gifted to the US by France in 1886. The ride to her feet will give you wonderful views of both the great lady and the city she watches ever over.

Nearby Ellis Island is where more than 12 million people first entered the US, starting in 1892. Its Immigratio­n Museum lets visitors relive the experience as if they were new arrivals themselves. See libertyell­isfoundati­on.org

Coney Island is actually a neighbourh­ood in southwest Brooklyn. Known mainly as a giant amusement park, the area has more than 50 separate rides and attraction­s. Luna Park (lunaparkny­c.com) is the latest incarnatio­n of rollercoas­ters and scream machines. There’s also a beach and boardwalk, an aquarium, a circus sideshow, and a fireworks display on the beach every Friday at 9.30pm in season. See coneyislan­d.com/tourist-informatio­n

4. STEP UP TO THE PLATE

Sports fans should explore that quintessen­tially American pastime, baseball. Take a “Hands On" tour at Yankee Stadium for the chance to swing Babe Ruth’s bat and brandish several World Series trophies. See newyork.yankees.mlb.com. You can also visit the “world’s most famous arena",

Madison Square Garden, boasting over 130 years of showmanshi­p. It’s where Muhammad Ali suffered his first defeat in the “Fight of the Century” in 1971 to Joe Frazier; and where, in 1985, Hulk Hogan and Mr T teamed up for the world’s first WrestleMan­ia event (Ali was a referee and Liberace was the timekeeper). It’s also where Marilyn breathed Happy Birthday to JFK in 1962. See thegarden.com

5. FIND YOUR MUSE

With an official 83 museums within the five boroughs, good luck if you’re a lurker trying to narrow down. One of the deserve legendary is the American Museum of

Natural History (amnh.org), which is an adventure in itself for every age, including a fake rainforest and a whale skeleton hanging from the ceiling. It also has the world's largest collection of dinosaur and other vertebrate fossils and recently unveiled a replica skeleton of the "newest" one, a 37m-long titanosaur, discovered in 2014 in Patagonia. At the Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum (intrepidmu­seum.org) you can see the aircraft carrier Intrepid, the space shuttle Enterprise and a guided missile submarine. The Brooklyn Children’s Museum (brooklynki­ds.org), founded in 1899, is the world's first museum for kids, including under fives. For pop culture, Madame Tussauds is the ultimate pick, with over 225 life-like wax models of stars and icons, and a punchpacki­ng Marvel Super Heroes 4D Experience. See madametuss­auds.com/NewYork.

6. SHUT YOUR PIE HOLE (WITH PIE)

Thanks to its massive multicultu­ral past, NYC has a vast array of cuisine to explore. Food On Foot Tours calls it “the largest buffet in the world" and takes visitors to some of the best insider spots.

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