Posts Tagged ‘Skyscraper Museum’

Culture Radiates in Lower Manhattan’s One Square Mile

Tuesday, January 3rd, 2012

From river to river, from Chambers to the Battery, Lower Manhattan is chock full of culture, art, and history.  But with Federal Hall, the Statue of Liberty, Century 21, and so many other notable attractions, it’s easy to forget!  The Downtown Alliance is here to remind you of all the incredible, diverse museums that call Lower Manhattan home.

African Burial Ground National Monument Visitor Center
290 Broadway | 212.637.2019
www.nps.gov/afbg

Anne Frank Center USA (opening February 2012)
44 Park Place | 212.431.7993
www.annefrank.com

Dialog in the Dark
South Street Seaport
11 Fulton Street | 888.926.3437
www.dialognyc.com

Ellis Island National Museum
Ellis Island
212.363.3200
www.ellisisland.org

Fraunces Tavern Museum
54 Pearl Street |212.425.1776
www.frauncestavernmuseum.org

Museum of Jewish  Heritage — A Living Memorial to the Holocaust
36 Battery Place|646.437.4202
www.mjhnyc.org

New York City Police Museum
100 Old Slip|212.480.3100
www.nycpolicemuseum.org

Skyscraper Museum
39 Battery Place|212.968.1961
www.skyscraper.org

Smithsonian Museum of American Finance
48 Wall Street |212.908.4110
www.financialhistory.org

Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian
1 Bowling Green|212.514.3700
www.nmai.si.edu

South Street Seaport Museum
12 Fulton Street |212.748.8600
www.southstreetseaportmuseum.org

Tribute WTC Visitor Center
120 Liberty Street|212.393.9160
www.tributewtc.org

Also, be sure to learn more about the Downtown Culture Pass, which offers the visitor to Lower Manhattan significant discounted access to eight cultural institutions and a walking tour of Wall Street all within walking distance of each other. The participating venues are Fraunces Tavern Museum, Museum of American Finance, Museum of Jewish Heritage, National Museum of the American Indian, 9/11 Preview Site, The New York City Police Museum, The Skyscraper Museum, Tribute WTC Visitor Center and Wall Street Walks.

For more information or to purchase the pass, please visit http://www.downtownculturepass.org/

Bookish Lower Manhattan

Monday, December 12th, 2011

Best-sellers? New York City history? Coffee table books? Mysteries? From niche bookstores like New York City’s CityStore to a plethora of museum bookshops, Lower Manhattan has everything you need – from cover to cover –  for your holiday shopping in one square mile. For a great read, check out our diversity of book stores below Chambers Street.

CityStore
Manhattan Municipal Building |One Centre Street, North Plaza
Manhattan Office of the City Clerk |141 Worth Street
(212)669-7452
www.nyc.gov/citystore

Pace University New York City Campus Bookstore
41 Park Row
(212)349-8580
www.pace.bncollege.com

Barnes & Noble
97 Warren Street
(212)587-5389
www.barnesandnoble.com

Manhattan Books
150 Chambers Street
(212)385-7395
www.manhattanbooks.com

Mysterious Bookshop
58 Warren Street
(212)587-1011
www.mysteriousbookshop.com

Museum of American Finance Shop
48 Wall Street
(212)908-4110
www.moaf.org/shop

Skyscraper Museum
39 Battery Place
(212)968-1961
www.skyscraper.org/MERCHANDISE/merchandise.htm

Looking for something besides a book? Travel  no further than the Downtown Alliance as your one-stop holiday shopping resource. We can give you access to more than 1,300 places to shop, dine and explore in Lower Manhattan.

You can get this information in one of three ways:
•    Visit the Downtown Alliance website
•    Download our mobile app at iTunes (search for “Downtown NY”)
•    Order a free hard copy of the new Lower Manhattan Shopping and Dining Guide here.

Visiting the Rise of Wall Street

Thursday, June 3rd, 2010

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If there is one thing I have learned from working in Lower Manhattan, it is that the area is constantly changing. I rarely turn a corner without discovering a new shop or restaurant or a high-rise construction site. So it seems only fitting that the latest exhibition at the Skyscraper Museum would be entitled The Rise of Wall Street.

The exhibition traces the illustrious history of one narrow street in New York City and follows the rise of the skyscrapers along it. But it also touches on the evolution of the skyscraper throughout Manhattan and the world. One section focuses on green initiatives in modern towers. And visitors also learn how modern skyscrapers can reach thousands of feet into the air without collapsing.

The physical layout of the exhibition is impressive. Large columns with posters of Wall Street skyscrapers stretch up to a mirrored ceiling, and as I wandered in between them, it seemed as if I was actually standing on Wall Street, staring up at its skyscrapers as they reached into an endless gray sky.

One of the most interesting things I learned was how Wall Street got its name. Before industrialization, a stockade ran along Wall Street, separating New Amsterdam from the rest of Manhattan. The original structure—made of simple picket and plank fencing—was meant to protect the Dutch settlement from English colonial forces. In 1653, Peter Stuyvesant led an effort to build a stronger structure. They erected a 12-foot wall that could also protect the settlement from various Native American tribes. Thirty years later, the road that ran along the stockade was named—sensibly enough—Wall Street.

After my museum visit, I took my own tour of the real Wall Street, just a few blocks away. It’s amazing to imagine the small buildings that once stood where skyscrapers now loom. The Rise of Wall Street gave me a wonderful appreciation for the transformation that occurred on one particular street in Manhattan over the course of a few hundred years. The Skyscraper Museum at 39 Battery Place is open from 12 to 6 PM Wednesday through Sunday. General admission is $5.