Rabu, 04 Mei 2016

New York City


About New York City : New York—often called New York City or the City of New York to distinguish it from the State of New York, of which it is a part—is the most populous city in the United States and the center of the New York metropolitan area, the premier gateway for legal immigration to the United States and one of the most populous urban agglomerations in the world. A global power city, New York exerts a significant impact upon commerce, finance, media, art, fashion, research, technology, education, and entertainment, its fast pace defining the term New York minute. Home to the headquarters of the United Nations, New York is an important center for international diplomacy and has been described as the cultural and financial capital of the world.
As I told for Niagra Falls earlier, this is the info anyone can get on the internet, but I am providing just to keep my framework intact. What NYC is, that only a person who has visited NYC can feel; it is beyond words.

Duration of the Trip: For us, it was a 4 days 3 night trip from Chicago. We started from Chicago on Thursday morning and reached back Chicago on Sunday night.

Transportation: We traveled by flight from Chicago to Newark airport and back to Chicago. From Newark airport, we rented a Toyota enterprise (www.enterprise.com) for next 4 days which cost us around $550.

Details of the Trip :
Day 1 : We started from Chicago by 6:30 am CST and reached Newark airport by 10:00 am EST. We rented a car and headed to Ramada Hotel in Parsippany, NJ. The best option is to stay at any hotel in New York city but we had friends at Parsippany to meet with and it’s much cheaper than NYC, so we opted for staying at Parsippany, NJ. The tariff was around $65 per day. This includes free parking and free breakfast. Breakfast was useless, though.
After we settled down in the hotel, we went to nearby Chand Palace restaurant; it’s a vegetarian restaurant and one of the places in Parsippany to serve awesome Indian food. After finishing our lunch, we went to Time Square.

Times Square
It was an altogether different feeling. I do live in downtown Chicago, but it’s nowhere can compete with the craze of Downtown NYC, The Times Square (No offense Chicagoans, I love Chicago more than NYC, Chicago has a living soul, which NYC can never compete with ☺ ). It was a strange place, one of the most attractive things I found there were the below fancy dressed people. They just dressed up to let other take photos with them.

We roamed there for around an hour and headed back to our hotel in Parsippany.

Day 2 : This was the day for real NYC Darshan. We had our breakfast and started for NYC by 8:30 in the morning. We drove down to NYC and parked our car in a free parking zone near to world Trade Centre. In NYC, this is a real pain to get a free parking and paid parking are bit too costly. So, near doesn't exactly mean very near, it was at a distance of about 1-2 miles.
The places we visited were,
Ground Zero, where the World Trade Center stood prior to the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001, one of biggest tragedy of recent times. After the destruction of twin towers, there are two pools build in the memory of the twin Towers, called North Pool and South Pool.
Each of the pool carries the name of all the people who lost their life in the misfortune.
Pool in Ground Zero

Pool in Ground Zero
A paid tour is conducted to explain the sites of World Trade Center before and after the mishap.
Tickets are available on their website.

The 9/11 Memorial Museum serves as the country's principal institution concerned with exploring the implications of the events of 9/11, documenting the impact of those events and exploring 9/11's continuing significance.
Museum is broadly categorized into three different sections based on their exhibitions,
Historical Exhibition, A historical exhibition tells the story of what happened on 9/11, including the events at the World Trade Center and the Pentagon and the story of Flight 93. This exhibition explores the background leading up to the events and examines their aftermath and continuing implications.
Picture was taken few hours before the Twin Tower Attack
Memorial Exhibition commemorates the lives of those who perished on September 11, 2001, and February 26, 1993, and provides visitors with the opportunity to learn about the men, women, and children who died. The exhibition features family photographs, oral remembrances, and rotating selections of personal artifacts.
Memorial Exhibition | Picture Courtesy : www.911memorial.org
Foundation Hall, a room of massive scale and soaring height. Here, the slurry wall, a surviving retaining wall of the original World Trade Center that withstood the devastation of 9/11, is presented as a testament to survival and determination. Against this backdrop, the Last Column stands 36-feet high and is covered with mementos, memorial inscriptions, and missing posters placed there by ironworkers, rescue workers, and others. Removed during a ceremony to mark the close of the recovery effort at Ground Zero, the column, laid prone, was draped with an American flag and escorted by an honor guard. Standing tall once again, the Last Column encourages reflection on the foundations of resilience, hope, and community with which we might build our collective future.
This place is bound to give you goosebumps, your heart will bleed feeling the pain what the victim and survivors had to go through during the terror attack. Each article of the museum cries out loudly about the incident, a real shame to the humanity.

Piece of stair demolished after Twin Tower Attack
Piece of demolished pillars of Twin Tower 

Slurry Wall of Twin Tower

A Ladder 3 truck affected by 9/11 attach

Structure of earlier Twin Tower available from the debris of 9/11
It was very truly written in the walls of the museum,
'No Day Shall Erase You From the Memory of Time' written using the scraps
 available in the 9/11 debris
Ticket costs $24 per adult, $18 for Senior Citizen(65+), College Students and US Veteran and $15 for youths of age group 7-17 years. An audio guide device is available at the reception of 9/11 Museum which charges $7 for the device and $2 for headphone. The same audio is available in for app store of all the smartphones and can be downloaded at free of cost.
To visit the entire museum it takes around an hour.

Next on our list was One World Trade Center, latest and most beautiful addition to the list of sky scrappers in the skyline of lower Manhattan. With a height of 1,776 feet, One World Trade Center is the tallest building United Stated of America and third in the world.
One World Trade Center
Before visiting NYC, I saw some ads for One World Trade Observatory which says  “There are millions of things to see in New York, One world Observatory is one in a million. The best view of New York” and trust me, no add ever been so true; this is truly one in a million. On the 100th floor of the Observatory, also known as the Discovery Level, Guests experience expansive, 360-degree views in all directions, taking in the iconic sights, surrounding waters and panoramic views of the city and beyond.

View of New York City from 1WTC observatory
Brooklyn Bridge from 1WTC observatory
I was indeed very excited having the first glimpse of The Statue of Liberty from the observatory.


Apart from the magnificent view of NYC, the most interesting part of one world trade observatory was the video played in the lift which going up and coming down. Do take the time to see the videos, that is just awesome.
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