New York City Tourism + Conventions Invites Visitors To Staten Island Like A New Yorker
September 07, 2023
New York City Tourism + Conventions Invite Travelers and Locals Alike to Experience Staten Island.
New York City Tourism + Conventions, New York City’s official destination
marketing organization, and convention and visitor's bureau for the five
boroughs of New York City, invites Southeast Asia visitors alike to
Staten Island Like a New Yorker
as part of the organization’s
Get Local NYC initiative.
New York City Tourism + Conventions Invites Visitors To Staten Island Like A New Yorker
Staten Island, a well-known borough among budget travelers, for a great view
of the Liberty Statue by taking a free ferry from Battery Park, Manhattan.
For experienced travelers, New York City’s southernmost borough is filled with
historic attractions, beach views, and global dining options—all just a ferry
ride away.
History buffs will want to see the Conference House, where Ben Franklin and
John Adams tried to broker peace with the British in 1776. Visitors can also
see the farm where Frederick Law Olmsted experimented with landscaping before
designing Central Park; and Historic Richmond Town, a village dating to the
late 17th century.
Baseball fans will want to catch a game with the FerryHawks while enjoying
stupendous views of the Manhattan skyline across New York Harbor.
Shopaholics will love the Empire Outlets, New York City's first and only
outlet shopping mall.
Kids will love the Staten Island Zoo and Children’s Museum.
Other unique points of interest on Staten Island include the Chinese Scholar’s
Garden at Snug Harbor; the National Lighthouse Museum; and the Jacques
Marchais Museum of Tibetan Art.
Admirers of the Catholic activist Dorothy Day, who devoted her life to serving
the poor, can pay respects at her gravesite and explore the remnants of the
bungalow beach community where she lived.
“Staten Island is home to an incredible variety of historical sites,
attractions for families, cultural enclaves, and beautiful areas to enjoy
nature, whether biking, birdwatching, or relaxing on a quiet beach,” said New
York City Toursim + Conventions President and CEO Fred Dixon.
NEIGHBORHOODS
Staten Island has more than 60 neighborhoods scattered across 60 square miles.
It is more suburban than most of NYC, with the fewest residents of any of the
five boroughs (population 500,000). It also has the highest percentage of
people who own their own homes (66%) and the fewest tall buildings (20 stories
is as high as it gets on Staten Island).
Here are details on some of the Island’s attractions, restaurants and places
to shop, organized by location.
ST. GEORGE
Take the ferry to St. George and enjoy views of the Manhattan skyline from the
North Shore Waterfront Esplanade. Look for Postcards, a stirring memorial to
the 275 Staten Islanders who perished on September 11, 2001. The National
Lighthouse Museum is within walking distance from the ferry, as is the
ballpark where the minor-league FerryHawks baseball team plays. Go for the
views as much as for the game, hot dogs, and beer. Or choose from more than 70
types of beer at the Flagship Brewing Co., less than a mile away.
Next to the ferry terminal is the City’s only outlet shopping mall, Empire
Outlets. Stores include Nordstrom Rack, Patterns & Dots, Cotton On, Lids,
Nike, Banana Republic, Gap, H&M, Old Navy, Parfum Europa, Samsonite,
iOptics and Guess.
The mall’s inviting outdoor spaces, fun food trucks and waterfront vistas make
it a great place to spend the afternoon. Don’t miss Clinton Hall, an airy
outdoor bar on an upper level with swings and games like Jenga and cornhole.
On-site stores can validate parking passes for the mall’s indoor parking lot.
The nearby St. George Theatre opened in 1929 as a grand movie-and-vaudeville
house. It has been used as a location for movies like The School of Rock and
TV shows like Gossip Girl. The theater has hosted everyone from Al Jolson to
Jerry Seinfeld. Shows scheduled for 2022 included Melissa Etheridge and Paul
Anka.
Dining options in the area include Pier 76 (go for the thin-crust pizza) and
Enoteca Maria, which features real grandmothers’ cooking from their native
cuisine on a rotating schedule. For those into classic comic books,
Hypno-Tronic Comics is a must.
WEST NEW BRIGHTON, WEST BRIGHTON AND RANDALL MANOR
The Snug Harbor Cultural Center & Botanical Garden is about two miles
north of the ferry terminal along the island’s North Shore in the West New
Brighton neighborhood (20 minutes via the S40, S44 or S46 bus lines). Snug
Harbor was founded in the 19th century as a retirement home for sailors; five
of its original Greek Revival buildings are city landmarks.
The complex includes a concert hall, the Newhouse Center for Contemporary Art,
the Staten Island Museum, the Noble Maritime Collection, and 14 themed
gardens. Among the most popular attractions are the Chinese Scholar’s Garden
and the Staten Island Children’s Museum.
The Staten Island Zoo, about two miles from Snug Harbor, is home to Staten
Island Chuck, a groundhog called upon every Groundhog Day to forecast whether
spring will come early. The zoo’s collection also includes sheep, goats,
leopards, lemurs, meerkats, and sloths, but it’s best known for its snakes,
including one of the country’s most complete collections of rattlesnakes.
Also nearby are Clove Lakes Park, Silver Lake Park, the Silver Lake Golf
Course and the Italian Cultural Foundation at Casa Belvedere, which hosts
exhibitions, cooking classes, sunset yoga, festivals, live performances, and
more. Egger’s Ice Cream Parlor is a mile from the zoo on Forest Avenue, where
it’s been serving up sweet treats since 1964. The legendary Ralph’s Famous
Italian Ices has several locations, including the original on Port Richmond
Avenue; be prepared to wait on a line stretching down the block.
RICHMOND TOWN
Historic Richmond Town tells the story of 350 years of life on Staten Island.
Richmond Town was the original county seat for Staten Island (which is also
known as Richmond County). Its preserved sites include a courthouse, church,
jail, tavern, cemetery and homes.
Visitors can take guided tours, interact with costumed interpreters and see
demonstrations of crafts and skills like blacksmithing. Programming includes
concerts and festivals. Decker Farm, which dates to 1810 and is considered
NYC’s oldest continuously working family farm, is a mile away.
Nearby Richmond Town are the Greenbelt Nature Center, High Rock Park and La
Tourette Park. Just south of La Tourette in the Great Kills section is Atrium
Stadium Cinemas, which hosted Kim Kardashian and Pete Davidson for a screening
of House of Gucci. North of La Tourette is the Staten Island Mall.
TOTTENVILLE
Tottenville is located on Staten Island’s southwestern tip, as far from the
ferry as any point on the island (but reachable via the Staten Island
Railway). It’s worth the trek, especially for anyone interested in American
history.
The Conference House, a grand stone manor house built in 1680, is the
second-oldest building in New York City. It’s named for a peace conference
held there on September 11, 1776, just a few months after the start of the
Revolutionary War between England and the American colonies.
Founding Fathers John Adams and Ben Franklin met with King George’s
representative, Lord Richard Howe, but the Americans were only authorized to
negotiate terms that included independence for the colonies, and the British
would not concede that point.
Also in Tottenville: Staten Island’s favorite beer hall, Killmeyer’s Old
Bavaria Inn, and the elegant Italian dining spot Angelina’s Ristorante, which
has seen a surge in popularity since you-know-who stopped by—Kim Kardashian.
GETTING THERE AND GETTING AROUND
Two ferry services connect Manhattan and Staten Island. There’s a free ferry
from the Whitehall Ferry Terminal in Lower Manhattan (take the R train to
Whitehall, the 4 or 5 to Bowling Green, or the 1 to South Ferry), or take a
NYC Ferry ($2.75) from either of two Manhattan departure points: Midtown
West/Pier 79 (near West 39th Street) and Battery Park City (follow Vesey
Street west to the river in Lower Manhattan). Both ferries dock at the St.
George terminal on the Staten Island side. From there, it’s a short walk to
the Empire Outlets Mall, the St. George Theatre and the FerryHawks baseball
stadium.
From the ferry terminal, visitors can catch buses to any number of
attractions, pick up taxis or rideshares, or even hop on the Staten Island
Railway, an aboveground train that runs from St. George on the island’s North
Shore all the way to Tottenville on the South Shore.
The same MetroCard used on subways and buses in NYC’s other boroughs works for
buses and the railway on Staten Island. Contactless credit/debit cards and
digital payments (like Apple Pay) are also accepted.
By car, visitors can reach Staten Island via one of four bridges: the
Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge connecting the island to Brooklyn, or the Bayonne
Bridge, Goethals Bridge, or Outerbridge Crossing, which links the island to
New Jersey.
Express buses run to Staten Island from Manhattan and Bay Ridge, Brooklyn.
For further information on exploring Staten Island, New York City Tourism +
Conventions, New York City’s official destination marketing organization and
convention and visitors bureau for the five boroughs of New York City, invites
locals and visitors alike to
Staten Island Like a New Yorker
as part of the organization’s
Get Local NYC initiative.
For further information on exploring Staten Island, visit
nycgo.com/statenisland.
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