Prima di tutto, i fatti: amiamo l'East Village! Precedentemente parte del Lower East Side, l'area è ampiamente considerata la culla del punk. Oggi, questo vivace centro urbano offre grandi opportunità di esplorazione: da interessanti servizi culturali e monumenti storici a bar e ristoranti alla moda, questo posto ha tutto. Indipendentemente da ciò che sceglierai di fare qui, è impossibile annoiarsi. Ma da dove dovresti iniziare? Beh, se hai intenzione di visitarlo, leggi la nostra lista per vivere il meglio dell'East Village.
Scopri la cultura locale
Una delle cose più emozionanti da fare a New York è andare a vedere uno spettacolo. Sebbene la zona offra un'ampia scelta di teatri eccellenti, la nostra prima scelta è sempre l'Orpheum Theater. Fondato nel 1904, questo luogo è noto per aver reso popolari La piccola bottega degli orrori e Stomp. Oggi, sotto lo stesso tetto, puoi assistere a tutto, dalle commedie esilaranti ai drammi più suggestivi. Con la sua storia unica e la sua sobria eleganza, non c'è posto migliore per chi ama le arti performative. Famoso per la sua storia di attivismo sociale e pensiero creativo, l'East Village offre una vita notturna che non teme confronti. Chi si reca in questa zona in cerca di arte di prima classe non rimarrà deluso! Gemma culturale emblematica e pilastro della scena artistica dell'East Village, il Nuyorican Poets Café è noto per aver dato slancio alla slam poetry. Per decenni, l'istituzione ha rappresentato una casa per opere fondamentali di poesia, musica, teatro e altro ancora. Con i suoi straordinari artisti e la sua atmosfera rilassata, questo posto è perfetto per bere un drink e immergersi nell'East Village in tutto il suo splendore. Non c'è niente di meglio che guardare un film con gli amici. Se stai cercando il posto perfetto, non preoccuparti: ci pensiamo noi! Per i cinefili più appassionati e i semplici spettatori, l' Anthology Film Archives proietta una gamma meravigliosamente varia di film d'essai. Dai grandi classici e i vecchi successi fino ai film indipendenti e alle commedie mute, qui c'è qualcosa per tutti. Dopo una lunga giornata di visite turistiche, questo è il luogo ideale per riposarsi e rilassarsi.
Esplora la zona
Se ti interessa saperne di più sulla storia dell'area, potresti visitare il Museum of the American Gangster. Un tempo noto come uno dei più famosi speakeasy della città, l'istituzione oggi si occupa di esaminare la storia della criminalità organizzata negli Stati Uniti. Tra la sua collezione insolita e affascinante, troverai le maschere funebri di John Dillinger, i proiettili dell'indagine sulla strage di San Valentino e i bossoli dell'ultima sparatoria di Bonnie e Clyde. Anche se il museo è piccolo, riteniamo che il valore della sua collezione renda la visita davvero meritevole. New York City non manca certo di grandi istituzioni culturali e l'East Village ospita alcuni degli incontri tematici più interessanti della città. Progettato dall'architetto ucraino-americano George Sawicki, il Ukranian Museum è riconosciuto come la più grande istituzione degli Stati Uniti dedicata esclusivamente al patrimonio culturale della comunità. Nella sua insolita collezione troverai di tutto: dalle belle arti e gli abiti tradizionali finemente ricamati fino a fotografie e documenti storici. Il museo offre anche conferenze in galleria, concerti e workshop creativi per chi è interessato.
Dopo un'esplorazione intensa, potresti aver voglia di far riposare i piedi stanchi. Fortunatamente, l'East Village offre molti splendidi spazi verdi, perfetti per rilassarsi e godersi un po' di sole. Un tempo centro di attività criminali nella zona, Tompkins Square Park è oggi un ottimo posto dove andare per un po' di svago. Fai una passeggiata, organizza un picnic o guarda esibizioni musicali dal vivo. Se viaggi durante Halloween, ti consigliamo anche di dare un'occhiata alla Halloween Dog Parade, dove potrai ammirare i cani del quartiere sfilare nei loro migliori costumi festivi per aggiudicarsi un primo premio di migliaia di dollari. Cosa c'è di meglio?
Scopri alcuni monumenti interessanti
Immerso nella storia e nella cultura, l'East Village ha molto da offrire al viaggiatore curioso grazie ai suoi splendidi monumenti. Se sei un appassionato di storia, non c'è posto migliore per ammirare questi edifici dell'East Village/Lower East Side Historic District. Situata al numero 59 di East 2nd Street, la cattedrale ortodossa russa è una delle nostre preferite per il suo esterno incredibilmente suggestivo. La cattedrale fu progettata dallo stimato architetto Josiah Cleveland Cady, che in seguito avrebbe costruito monumenti emblematici come il primo Metropolitan Opera House e l'auditorium dell'American Museum of Natural History. I visitatori possono partecipare a dei tour per ammirare i soffitti alti, i bellissimi dipinti decorativi e gli intagli intricati. Sia che ti interessi la storia della zona o che tu voglia scoprire il tuo lato spirituale, questo luogo merita sicuramente una visita. Mentre Midtown è nota per i suoi imponenti grattacieli, l'East Village ospita molti edifici storici che raccontano la ricca storia del quartiere. Costruita nel 1910, la sinagoga di Meserich riflette i forti legami della zona con la comunità ebraica all'inizio del secolo. L'edificio si distingue per la suggestiva facciata in pietra in stile neoclassico, mentre l'interno presenta un imponente arca e vetrate colorate. Sebbene l'edificio sia stato ristrutturato, questa gemma nascosta testimonia ancora l'esperienza degli immigrati in città e un momento cruciale della storia ebraica. Vivace e ricco di cultura, l'East Village è senza dubbio una delle zone più alla moda di NYC. Il quartiere è più economico da esplorare rispetto ad altre parti di The Village, pur non essendo meno interessante. Sarebbe facile trascorrere un'intera giornata solo ad ammirare l'architettura e a godersi l'atmosfera del quartiere. Che tu sia un amante della buona cucina, un appassionato di storia o un tipo artistico, la zona ha moltissimo da offrire. Per scoprire come risparmiare sul tuo viaggio, dai un'occhiata al nostro Pass Explorer e al Pass Tutto Incluso. Per ulteriori dettagli, assicurati di connetterti con noi su Instagram e Facebook.
Take a St Marks Place stroll
Take a St Marks Place stroll
It’s no exaggeration to say that St Mark’s Place is to the East Village what Chelsea Market is to Chelsea, or what Wall Street is to FiDi. This legendary strip has been at the epicenter of the East Village counter-culture ifor decades, from the punk fashions and paraphernalia of Trash and Vaudeville to the poetry archives and performances at nearby St Mark’s Church-in-the-Bowery.
Sure, it runs just a few blocks but within that relatively small area lie decades of cultural capital. Neon-lit ramen shops, incense-scented novelty stores, tattoo parlors and manga bookshops sit elbow to elbow and, as with much of Manhattan, there are world-class people-watching opportunities at every turn.
Start at Astor Place and wander east, pausing whenever a crepe stand, lively Japanese izakaya or vintage thrift store catches your eye. Vinyl record stores also abound here, all brimming with classics and punk memorabilia. And where better to pick up a Ramones LP than in the very neighborhood that birthed them.
Street murals add extra layers (and multiple Insta-perfect photo ops) to your stroll, so allow time to wander, peer into alleyways and people-watch from tiny sidewalk cafés. It’s pure East Village magic.
Go barking mad in Tompkins Square Park
Go barking mad in Tompkins Square Park
All that urban exploring will almost certainly have exhausted your poor little feety-weet. Fortunately for you and your tender toes, the East Village has plenty of beautiful green spaces in which to relax and recharge, perhaps while gloating over your vinyl haul and/or guzzling down a legendary falafel wrap from East Village stalwart Mamoun’s.
Once a hotbed of criminal activity, Tompkins Square Park has been fully gentrified for your perfectly safe, crime-free pleasure. Wander its leafy lanes, pause for a picnic on the lawns, check out the plaques commemorating protests and punk rock riots, and take on the local chess sharks at the gaming tables.
Pro-tip: You’re in for a spooktacular treat if you happen by Tompkins Square Park on Halloween. For this is the location for the East Village’s annual Halloween Dog Parade, which is precisely what it sounds like. Expect pooches strutting their stuff in costume, with big cash prizes for the best dressed. Our money’s on the labrador in a lab coat or the shitsu in sheep’s clothing.
Explore more local landmarks
Steeped in living history and several impressive landmarks, the East Village has plenty more to offer the curious, camera-toting traveler. Mosey over to 59 East 2nd Street, where the striking exterior of the Russian Orthodox church there – all bright red bricks and soaring arched windows – is perfect eye candy for your Insta reels. Take a tour to ogle its no-less-impressive interiors: high ceilings, decorative paintings and intricate carvings abound. It’s almost, dare we say, a spiritual experience.
Elsewhere, the presence of the Meserich Synagogue, built in 1910, reflects the neighborhood's strong ties with the Jewish community around the turn of the century. Though now largely a condo, the synagogue’s striking neoclassical façade remains, and is another East Village showstopper, featuring a stunner of a stained-glass window.
Culture and Village vibes
Take in a show
Take in a show
You’re in New York, baby, so of course Broadway beckons, with its bright lights and big-ticket shows like The Lion King, Wicked and Cabaret. But there are also theatrical treasures to be found off-Broadway, including over here in the East Village, where the Orpheum Theater, established way back in 1904 has staged landmark productions of Anything Goes, Little Shop of Horrors and Stomp.
Or, for more intimate performances, hit up the 198-seat New York Theatre Workshop for boundary-pushing productions with up-and-coming actors – shows including Rent, Dirty Blonde and Once all made their debuts here before graduating to Broadway.
Visit the Merchant’s House Museum
The only 19th-century building in Manhattan with both interior and exterior still intact, the Merchant’s House Museum harks back to a bygone era of life in NYC. Merchant Seabury Tredwell and his wife Eliza bought this sweet crib in 1835 and the house (and many of its contents and heirlooms) stayed in the family until around a century later, at which point the house became a museum. And the rest, as they say, is history.
Step inside to find yourself inside a Victorian time capsule, filled with hundreds of antiques and artifacts, from horsehair furniture and vintage children’s toys to oil lamps, a music box and several haunting family portraits. Speaking of haunting, it’s said that many of the former residents of this perfectly preserved family home decided to stick around after they passed. So don’t be surprised if you feel a sudden cold draft along the creaky corridors, or spot a spectral woman in a nightgown out of the corner of your eye.
Hit the East Village vintage shops
Hit the East Village vintage shops
If you’re into quirky vintage finds and thrift store treasures, it’s highly likely you’ll hit the jackpot in the East Village. Hip shops line streets from Avenue A to Third, toting everything from O.G. Levi’s denim jackets from the ‘70s to rhinestone boots, retro band tees and bold costume jewelry.
L Train Vintage is where it’s at for racks stacked with retro denim and classic bombers, or visit the East Village Vintage Collective for more upscale pieces and accessories. Self-styled ‘thriftique’ AuH2O mixes curated women’s wear with killer accessories and, if old-school vinyl’s your vibe, pop into Academy Records nearby to dig through crates of classic LPs. Who knows, this might just be the place to find that original Patti Smith pressing you’ve been seeking for years.
Get bookish at the Strand Book Store
Every New York bibliophile worth their salt knows the flagship store on Broadway, but savvy readers head to Strand’s East Village Annex for a quieter, more neighborhood-y browsing experience. This sweet little corner of literary heaven stocks everything from secondhand novels to offbeat magazines, graphic novels and hefty art tomes. You’ll spot local zines, cool poetry collections, and even (perhaps inevitably) piles of vintage vinyl.
Staff here are enthusiastic about recommendations, so don’t be shy about asking what’s good – or bad. Just wander in on any rainy afternoon and let the bookish hush cocoon you; we pretty much guarantee you’ll walk out with a parcel of new reads tucked under your arm and – perhaps more importantly – dry feet.
The Ukrainian Museum
Often overlooked, this fine repository of all things Ukrainian is well worth an hour or two of your time. Located on East 6th Street just a few blocks from Tompkins Square, it preserves Ukrainian cultural heritage via a number of different strands. The first is via documentation of the legacy of Ukrainian immigration in the USA, including photographs, letters, posters, travel documents and more; indeed the building itself was designed by celebrated Ukrainian-American architect George Sawicki.
Secondly, there’s a whole world of fine folk art to explore, with exhibits that run the gamut from ceramics and traditional costumes to hand-painted pysanky (Ukrainian Easter eggs). Lovers of fine art will also be in clover – the museum’s collection of Ukrainian painting, drawing and sculpture is second-to-none, including pieces by Nikifor, Emma Andiewska, Oleksa Novakivskyi, Ivan Trush and many more.
East Village eats and drinks
Veselka
Veselka
Carrying on the theme, Veselka has been feeding hungry Ukrainian-Americans (and, well, anyone else with operational tastebuds) from the same Second Avenue venue since 1954. We’re talking proper old-school Ukrainian comfort food: perfect pierogi, beautiful borscht and sensational stuffed cabbage for the win.
Veselka’s unpretentious and buzzy diner-style set-up has been winning hearts (and stomachs) for decades. For our money, it’s the pierogi that steals the show. Order a selection – potato, braised beef short rib, cheese, and sauerkraut, served with sour cream – for the full experience, then follow with hearty chicken paprikash and a dreamy blintz plate with sweetened cheese. Yum.
Pro-tip: Veselka stays open round the clock on weekends, perfect for post-nightlife munchies.
Momofuku Noodle Bar
For something a little lighter, hit up Momofuku Noodle Bar, David Chang’s trendsetting East Village O.G. This is the place that helped put ramen on the NYC map and, more than two decades later, the food still has the power to dazzle.
On the menu: stellar ramen bowls (natch, don’t skip the smoked pork belly, pillowy shiitake buns, and small plates that riff on classic Asian flavors; think pickle plates, hand rolls and fried fingerling potatoes. Frankly it’s making us hungry just writing about it.
The cocktails here are clever, too, with house infusions and a rotating sake menu. Try a vodka-spiked Vietnamese Coffee or go on in on a three-shot sake flight.
McSorley’s Old Ale House
Nothing says East Village quite like McSorley’s. This old-school boozer has hardly changed at all since opening way back in 1854 – yep, it’s an original alright, right down to the sawdust floors. Do the time warp as you step through those storied doors into a world of antique artifacts, newspaper clippings, pub memorabilia and other ephemera from the last two centuries. Look out for Houdini’s handcuffs and unsnapped turkey wishbones dangling from gas lanterns – relics left by the WWI soldiers who never returned.
The drinks menu is minimal. Choose from light or dark ale and pair with a cheese plate for the full, immersive McSorley’s experience. Suffice to say that, despite the limited options, NYC’s oldest pub must be doing something right to have survived for this long – it’s said that some long-dead regulars liked it so much that they’re still hanging around here somewhere, long after their last call.
Death & Co
Death & Co
Which, by a fine happenstance, brings us to Death & Co, a bucket-list (geddit?) East Village stop if ever there was one. Cocktail aficionados flock to this, their final destination (of the day) for high-class mixology in a moody speakeasy-style lounge. Dress to impress and sashay on in for impeccably balanced signature classics and innovative guest cocktails that change with the seasons.
This is craft cocktail chic for the Insta generation. Camera phones at the ready for flamboyant mixology stunts and equally colorful garnishes sure to make your reels pop.
Looking for more NYC neighborhood recommendations? Get the lowdown on Chelsea's best bits and follow your nose to the heady aromas and sightseeing hits of Chinatown.
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