切尔西(Chelsea)创意十足且多元包容,是纽约最著名的宝藏胜地之一。 该地区位于曼哈顿西城,拥有纽约市顶尖的文化景点、餐饮场所和夜生活目的地。 从惠特尼美术馆(The Whitney)和鲁宾艺术博物馆(Rubin)这些精彩的艺术殿堂,到切尔西市场(Chelsea Market)熙熙攘攘的摊位,您将在这个充满活力的时尚街区获得丰富体验。 因此,如果您计划探索切尔西,请参考我们的清单开启您的行程。 无论您选择体验什么,我们保证您都不会失望!
探索该地区
想要探索当地文化,还有比逛逛当地市场更好的方式吗? 我们认为没有。 Chelsea Market 坐落于原国家饼干公司工厂大楼(奥利奥饼干的发源地),即便只为了这里的食品大厅,也绝对值得一游。 切尔西市场是一场感官盛宴,拥有 30 多家摊位,为您提供各种菜系的美味佳肴。 从塔可、贝果到多纳圈,再到刚出炉的德国咖喱香肠,这里的美味能满足每个人的味蕾。 除了令人垂涎的餐饮选择,市场内还有各种各样的商店,非常值得一逛。 融入熙攘的人群,漫步于摊位之间,尽情沉浸在这奇妙的氛围中。 嘿,谁能不爱这里呢? 切尔西一直是一个致力于艺术与文化的社区,因此这里拥有纽约市一些最棒的跳蚤市场也就不足为奇了。 Artists and Fleas Market 汇集了来自全市各地的顶级摊贩和时尚达人,绝对是实惠购物者的梦想之地。 从翻新的复古珍品、稀有收藏品,到原创艺术品和手工家居用品,这里应有尽有。 我们特别喜爱这个市场酷炫、悠闲的氛围以及独一无二的商品。 如果您追求的是奢华与避世感,那么这里就是您的不二之选。 作为切尔西码头体育娱乐中心(Chelsea Piers Sports & Entertainment Complex)的一部分,该高尔夫俱乐部被公认为全市最受欢迎的高尔夫练习场和教学学院。 这家梦幻的避世之所俯瞰哈德逊河(Hudson River),正是梦寐以求的理想之地。 该学院欢迎高尔夫狂热爱好者和业余玩家,提供练习环节、私人课程和全挥杆模拟器。 在优美的户外空间里放松身心,练习切球和推球。 我们想不出比这更好的方式来度过纽约阳光明媚的下午了!
游览景点
胆小者请绕道! Edge 专为寻求刺激和冒险的人士打造,为您提供终生难忘的惊险体验。 该景点高悬于城市上空,被誉为西半球最高的户外露天观景台。 透过玻璃地板俯瞰 100 层下的美景,在高空啜饮香槟,以前所未有的视角领略壮丽的城市景观。 如果容器(Vessel)还没能让您尽兴,那么这里一定会让您大呼过瘾! 说到纽约,举世闻名的建筑风格定是首先浮现在脑海的事物之一。 对于 Instagram 达人和建筑发烧友来说,Vessel 绝对是不容错过的奇观。 这座引人注目的公共艺术作品高度达 150 英尺,为您提供观赏城市、河流及更远处的全新视角。 由于攀爬路程较长,我们建议您穿上最舒适的鞋子! 虽然纽约市以高耸入云的摩天大楼和现代建筑闻名,但这里也有许多美丽的绿地。 Little Island 坐落在哈德逊河上方的高处,是休闲娱乐的首选目的地。 漫步在公园里,您可以欣赏到令人赞叹的城市美景,以及各种花草树木。 此外,这里还有一个面向哈德逊河且拥有 700 个座位的露天剧场,您可以在此欣赏音乐、戏剧和舞蹈表演。 公园占地 2.4 英亩,提供各种丰富的活动供您参与,在这里绝不会感到无聊。
尽情发挥创意
艺术在切尔西区充满活力且无与伦比的文化景观中发挥着至关重要的作用。 该地区有 200 多家艺术画廊,但凭借其出色的常设馆藏和独特的展览,The Whitney Museum 始终是我们的首选。 自 1930 年成立以来,惠特尼美术馆已成为美国公认的领先现代艺术机构之一。 在丰富的馆藏中,您可以欣赏到让-米歇尔·巴斯奎特的绘画、安迪·沃霍尔的电影、理查德·阿维顿的摄影作品…… 此类名作不胜枚举。 无论您是艺术爱好者还是充满好奇心的探险家,这里一定会让您赞叹不已。 切尔西是公认的文化枢纽和潮流达人聚集地,也是曼哈顿最受创意人士青睐的胜地之一。 Rubin Museum of Art 将艺术与历史相结合,专门展示来自喜马拉雅地区、中亚和西藏的作品。 该博物馆拥有令人惊叹的馆藏,包含超过 3.8 万件作品,历史可追溯至 15 世纪。 这里极具魅力且独一无二,绝对应该位居每位游客行程的首选! 切尔西充满了创意活力和文化气息,在博物馆资源方面也毫不逊色。 Museum at FIT 极具吸引力(且完全免门票!),被公认为纽约唯一一家专门展示时尚艺术的画廊。 进入馆内,游客可以欣赏到超过 5 万件内容丰富的馆藏,其历史可追溯至 5 世纪。 对时尚特别感兴趣的游客还可以在此参加由顶尖设计师主持的特别项目、讲座和签名会。 切尔西始终保持着酷炫与活力,能为充满热情的旅行者提供所需的一切。 该地区主要以其艺术画廊和著名的地标建筑而闻名。 但其独特的市集和时尚餐厅也吸引了众多游客。 在惠特尼美术馆欣赏世界级的艺术,在 Artists and Fleas 市集尽情购物,并在 Edge 观景台高空俯瞰城市——世界随您尽情探索! 为了让您的行程更加充实,请查看我们的畅游包和自选包。 如果您想了解更多信息,请在 Instagram 与我们联系并 Facebook。 借助 Go City®,您可以花更少的钱,看更多的景点。
Chelsea Market
Chelsea Market
What better way to kick off your Chelsea adventure than with a wander among the lanes of Chelsea Market, filling your bag with bagels and your face with falafel? If you ask us, there really is no superior intro to the city’s artsiest neighborhood than eyeballing gallery-worthy patisserie windows, artisan confections, and looks-good-enough-to eat handmade jewelry.
Housed in the former National Biscuit Company factory building (where the Oreo cookie was created, fact fans), Chelsea Market is part food court, part shopping bazaar, and 100% New York. It’s worth visiting for the food alone: an absolute extravaganza for the senses, the market hosts some 30+ vendors, each conjuring up the kind of dreamy culinary delights that will have you quietly loosening your belt a notch (or two) if you hang around too long. We’re talking tempting tacos, big ol’ bagels, discus-sized donuts, lush lobster rolls, and currywurst hot off the grill, to name just a few. And don’t skip the legendary chocolate chip cookies from Fat Witch Bakery.
But of course Chelsea Market isn’t purely about eating. Curious shoppers will also find everything from vintage books and handmade jewelry to fresh flowers and unusual spices – plenty, in other words, to fill a whole morning.
The High Line
The High Line
Ready for a walk with a difference? From Chelsea Market, it’s just a hop and a skip to the High Line’s nearest entrance point. Grab a picnic of artisan breads, cheeses and charcuterie and climb the steps up to this former railtrack. Now a public park, this elevated urban greenway cuts a swathe along Manhattan’s West Side, weaving its way from the Meatpacking District up through the heart of Chelsea and into Hudson Yards.
There’s plenty to do along the High Line’s 1.5-mile length, too. Catch great views of the Hudson and shimmering Midtown Manhattan skyline, pause at colorful wildflower gardens that are alive with bees and butterflies in summer, and get your Insta on at the ever-rotating public art installations that punctuate the walk. There are also plenty of benches to be found in this verdant floating garden, each positioned to make the best of the city views. But this is also prime NYC people-watching territory, so grab a gelato, take a seat and settle in for the show.
Pro-tip: Go City’s NYC pass includes a handy guided tour of the High Line, starting at Chelsea Market, in case you like your walks peppered with a bit of lively narration.
Edge and Vessel
Edge and Vessel
Ok ok, so these two Hudson Yards titans aren’t strictly in Chelsea; they are, as we just said, in Hudson Yards. But allow us a little artistic licence would ya? We think they’re both good enough (and close enough) to merit a mention here. Plus you’ll find them right at the northern end of the High Line, which you’ve just walked along anyway, so…
At 1,100 feet above terra firma, Edge is the higher of these two observation platforms by quite some considerable margin (though admittedly it might not feel that way once you’ve tramped Vessel’s 2,500 stairs). Look up: that’s it jutting shard-like from the side of the soaring 30 Hudson Yards skyscraper. And yep, that’s a see-through floor, too. Suffice to say that the Western Hemisphere’s highest outdoor viewing platform ain’t for the faint of heart.
And nor is Vessel for the weak of glute. This wild, copper honeycomb structure has about a mile of steps to climb, but rewards those fit enough to make the ascent with ever-changing views of Hudson Yards from around 80 different platforms.
Whitney Museum of American Art
Whitney Museum of American Art
We’re heading right down to the other end of the High Line now (just think of the steps you’re clocking up!), where the Whitney Museum of American Art gleams like a bedazzling Renzo Piano-designed jewel. That’s probably because it is a bedazzling Renzo-Piano-designed jewel, all sugar-white facades, tumbling terraces and beautifully lit open gallery spaces. Step inside to explore a veritable who’s who of American art, including – with more than 3,000 pieces – the largest collection of Edward Hopper’s work on the planet, including masterpieces like Early Sunday Morning and Second Story Sunlight.
But there’s plenty more eye candy to explore besides Hopper, with landmark works by Jean-Michel Basquiat, Jackson Pollock, Jasper Johns, Georgia O'Keeffe, Alice Neel, Alexander Calder, Andy Warhol and more, plus plenty of talented up-and-comers; the superstars of tomorrow, if you will.
Step straight from the galleries onto the outdoor terraces for a breath of fresh air and Insta-ready skyline snaps that take in the Hudson and the High Line.
Chelsea Galleries
Chelsea Galleries
Sure, the Whitney might be the jewel in Chelsea’s arty crown, but there are plenty more galleries for all you art lovers out there to ogle. Around 300 in fact, depending who you ask.
After all, Chelsea is New York’s gallery capital, with spaces showcasing anything from contemporary painting to sound installations and bleeding-edge experimental performance art. Best of all, you’ll rarely have to walk too far to discover something that fits your vibe – most galleries are clustered between 10th and 11th Avenues, making it easy to hop from one to the next, catching bold video art and pop-up sculpture gardens without having to revert to tedious subway rides. But you’ll also find some of the bigger names, like Gagosian and David Zwirner, with their museum-quality shows between West 19th and 24th Street.
Little Island
Little Island
The High Line ain’t the only cool green oasis in this part of town, no siree Bob. Perched high above the Hudson River between Pier 57 and the Gansevoort Peninsula, Little Island looks like something from an 80s sci-fi movie. Designed to look like a cluster of rolling green hills supported on tulip-shaped pillars, its 2.4-acre expanse stitches gardens, performance spaces, walking trails and widescreen river vistas into one playful patchwork.
You remembered to grab a picnic from our old pal the Chelsea Market, right? Great! Then pick a spot on the lawns and munch on pastry after delectable pastry as the ferries drift by below. Suitably fortified, stroll the wildflower gardens and settle in for a show at the 700-seater Little Island Amphitheater (aka The Amph), which hosts music, dance, theater and fun family shows throughout summer.
Chelsea Piers Sports & Entertainment Complex
Chelsea Piers Sports & Entertainment Complex
Fancy something a little more… active? Chelsea Piers is the luxe sports and recreation utopia you didn’t know you needed, and you’ll find it just a short way north of Little Island, along the Hudson River Parkway, on Manhattan’s west edge. This sprawling complex straddles several piers and covers a broad range of activities, from rock climbing to figure skating.
Highlights include a bustling bowling alley, batting cages, and even a year-round indoor ice-skating rink. But it’s the Golf Club’s epic two-tiered driving range that makes our hearts sing (and our golf clubs swing). Not just any old driving range, this one comes complete with splendid views of the city skyline.
Chill, chip and swing against that Big Apple backdrop? There’s surely no better way to spend a sunny New York afternoon.
The Museum at the Fashion Institute of Technology
The Museum at the Fashion Institute of Technology
Surely the most fashionable museum in NYC, the Museum at the Fashion Institute of Technology (or the Museum at FIT if you want to save yourself five minutes saying the whole name) is the only gallery in town that’s dedicated exclusively to the art of fashion (or ‘F’, if you will). Tucked away inside the famed FIT campus on W 27th, it’s home to a collection of more than 50,000 pieces, with some dating as far back as the 5th century. And you thought the 1990s was outdated!
Expect exhibitions that celebrate clothing as creative expression. From avant-garde couture gowns to sneaker culture, pop-culture icons and 18th-century corsetry, the rotating displays always have a story to tell. Immersive installations, interactive features and videos encourage visitors to dig deeper or simply revel in the glamor of it all; special programs, talks and signings with leading designers are also de rigueur here.
Rubin Museum of Art
As if there’s any other way to conclude an article about Chelsea than with – yes – yet another gallery. But the Rubin Museum of Art promises something a little different, focusing on works from the Himalayas, Central Asia, and Tibet. The museum’s impressive collection comprises more than 38,000 pieces, and covers some seven centuries of human artistry and endeavour.
Quiet, contemplative and beautifully designed, the Rubin invites you to slow down and step inside a world of colors, symbols and stories. It feels like it moves at a different speed from the district’s super-slick contemporary art spaces, and that’s kinda the whole appeal. You’ll explore floors lined with intricate centuries-old mandalas, textiles and statues; there are also several immersive installations as well as more modern pieces inspired by the Buddhist philosophy. In short, if you’re in need of a peaceful pause away from the hubbub of the city streets, the Rubin’s spiral staircase, central lounge, and quietly beautiful collection are like a balm for the senses.
Looking for more NYC inspo? Discover all the best things to do in Central Park and hit up the highlights of Astoria.
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