Arts & Culture
The Museum of Modern Art
11 West 53rd StreetMużew tal-Arti Kontemporanju Ġdid
235 BoweryGetting Around
Union Square
Transfers to the L, 4, 5, 6, N, Q, and R Trains.
Shopping
Urban Outfitters
162 2nd AveFarmers Market with great organic produce, baked goods, and flowers. Great place to grab a coffee and people watch as well.
987 il-persuni tal-post jissuġġerixxu
Union Square
Farmers Market with great organic produce, baked goods, and flowers. Great place to grab a coffee and people watch as well.
A short walk from the apartment to stock up on food and drinks. Who doesn't like TJ's?!
1296 il-persuni tal-post jissuġġerixxu
Trader Joe's
130 Court StA short walk from the apartment to stock up on food and drinks. Who doesn't like TJ's?!
High-quality/high-priced food and groceries. Warning: the checkout lines can sometimes be incredibly frustrating during peak hours.
1895 il-persuni tal-post jissuġġerixxu
Whole Foods Market
95 E Houston StHigh-quality/high-priced food and groceries. Warning: the checkout lines can sometimes be incredibly frustrating during peak hours.
Essentials
New Village Cleaners
511 6th AveGreat Dry Cleaning. Fast and reasonably priced.
Sightseeing
Il-Park tal-High Line
http://www.thehighline.org/activities
Entertainment & Activities
Sleep No More adapts the story of Macbeth, deprived of all spoken dialogue and set primarily in a dimly-lit, 1930s-era establishment called the "McKittrick Hotel": the website of which claims it has been recently "restored" but is actually a block of warehouses in Manhattan, transformed into a hotel-like performance space. Sleep No More's presentational form is considered promenade theatre, in which the audience walks at their own pace through a variety of theatrically designed rooms, as well as environmental theatre, in which the physical location, rather than being a traditional playhouse, is an imitation of the actual setting.
100 il-persuni tal-post jissuġġerixxu
Sleep No More
530 W 27th StSleep No More adapts the story of Macbeth, deprived of all spoken dialogue and set primarily in a dimly-lit, 1930s-era establishment called the "McKittrick Hotel": the website of which claims it has been recently "restored" but is actually a block of warehouses in Manhattan, transformed into a hotel-like performance space. Sleep No More's presentational form is considered promenade theatre, in which the audience walks at their own pace through a variety of theatrically designed rooms, as well as environmental theatre, in which the physical location, rather than being a traditional playhouse, is an imitation of the actual setting.