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Greenacre Park

New York City, New York

why we love it

Greenacre Park is a small, tucked-away park in Midtown Manhattan that offers a sense of calm despite the busy streets around it. It's defined by a large cascading waterfall at the back, which drowns out street noise and sets the tone for the space. Even though it’s a small space, terraces, movable seating, and dense plantings create little sanctuaries that feel relatively private amid the city.

Photos courtesy of Matthew Arielly, Sasaki

Originally featured in The New York City Parks and Green Spaces Guide

category

Activities

Greenacre Park

217 E. 51st St., New York

hours

Mon-Sun: 8am-6pm

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Central Park

Central Park

59th to 110th Street, between Fifth Avenue and Central Park West, Manhattan
Mon-Sun: 6am-1am

It would be impossible not to include Central Park—New York's most coveted green space and, in many ways, what the rest of the city orbits around. Stretching 2.5 miles from 59th to 110th Street, it offers a mix of open lawns, wooded paths, water, and formal gardens. See the iconic landmarks at least once: the cinematic Bethesda Terrace and fountain, Belvedere Castle, and The Lake—which is most memorably experienced by rowboat (rentable onsite). Seasonal moments make it worth returning to, from ice skating at Wollman Rink to Shakespeare in the Park at the newly renovated Delacorte Theater. But the real appeal is in the in-between: long walks around the Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis Reservoir with its uninterrupted skyline views, quieter shaded paths that feel removed from the city, and the simple act of finding a bench or patch of grass to sit with a coffee. For kids, the Central Park Zoo, the petting-friendly Tisch Children's Zoo, and numerous playgrounds make for an enjoyable afternoon outdoors.

Prospect Park

Prospect Park

Grand Army Plaza, Brooklyn
Mon-Sun: 6am-1am

Prospect Park is one of Brooklyn's most special—and expansive—green spaces. Designed by the same landscape architects behind Central Park, it's often considered their more resolved work, with a stronger sense of cohesion and more seamlessly integrated landscapes. The borough's second largest park borders the Brooklyn Museum, and Brooklyn Botanic Garden, with Grand Army Plaza serving as a grand entrance (reminiscent of the Arc de Triomphe in scale) and home to a standout greenmarket on Saturdays. Inside, the West Drive is ideal for running or biking, while the Long Meadow draws people for picnics, casual games, and afternoons on the grass. There's a carousel and the Prospect Park Zoo, but the real hub is the LeFrak Center at Lakeside—an ice rink in winter that becomes a roller skating area in warmer months, with a "Splash Pad" water area, seasonal yoga, pickleball, and a café and bar.

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828 Washington St., New York
Mon-Sun: 7am-10pm

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Domino Park

15 River St, Brooklyn
Mon-Sun: 6am-11pm

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Hudson River Park

353 West St., New York
Mon-Sun: 6am-1pm

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Pier 55 at West 13th St., New York
Mon-Sun: 6am-12am

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870-898 Gresham Rd, New York
Open 24 hours

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Riverside Dr. to Hudson River, W. 72 St.to W 153 St., New York
Mon-Sun: 6am-1am

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990 Washington Ave., Brooklyn
Mon: Closed
Tues: 10am-8:30pm
Wed: 10am-6pm
Thurs: 10am-8:30pm
Fri-Sun: 10am-6pm

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Elizabeth St. between Prince St. & Spring St.
Mon-Sun: 10am-6pm

Elizabeth Street Garden is a small, hidden garden in Nolita that feels almost out of place in downtown Manhattan. Nestled between buildings, it's filled with dense greenery, winding paths, and an unexpected collection of classical-style sculptures, giving it the feel of a slightly overgrown European courtyard. What makes it special is how unpolished and personal it is—there’s no formal landscaping, but rather a patchwork of plants, stone, and objects accumulated over time. It's simply somewhere to slow down for a bit and quiet your mind, tucked into the middle of Nolita.

Jefferson Market Garden

Jefferson Market Garden

10 Greenwich Ave, New York
Mon: Closed
Tues-Sun: 10am-6pm

Jefferson Market Garden is a small, volunteer-maintained community garden in Greenwich Village, tucked behind the Gothic-style Jefferson Market Library. It's easy to miss, but inside you'll find winding brick paths, beautifully kept flowers, seasonal plantings, and shaded benches that make it feel removed from the surrounding streets. There's no programming or open lawn—just a quiet, well-kept space to sit, read, or take a break.

New York Botanical Garden

New York Botanical Garden

2900 Southern Blvd., Bronx
Mon: Closed
Tues-Sun: 10am-6pm

The New York Botanical Garden is one of the most expansive—and immersive—green spaces in the city. Spanning 250 acres in the Bronx, it's the perfect place to go when you want to be fully outside and feel like you've actually left the city. It brings together formal gardens, curated plant collections, and a 50-acre old-growth forest—the last of its kind in New York. At its center is the Enid A. Haupt Conservatory, a landmark glasshouse with climate-specific environments and rotating exhibitions often worth the trip alone.

The Conservatory Garden

The Conservatory Garden

105th St. and 5th Ave., New York
Mon-Sun: 8am-8pm

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The Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Sculpture Garden at MoMA

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11 W 53rd St, New York
Sat-Thurs: 10:30am-5pm
Fri: 10:30am-8:30pm

The MoMA Sculpture Garden—officially the Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Sculpture Garden at the Museum of Modern Art—is a quiet outdoor extension of the museum. Designed as a "Midtown oasis," it features a rotating collection of modern and contemporary sculptures in an open-air setting. Key works often on view include Pablo Picasso's She-Goat, Henri Matisse's Back (I–IV) series, and Joan Miró's Moonbird, each installed with room to be experienced up close. It's one of the few places in the city where you can sit outside, surrounded by major artworks, without it feeling overly formal—a calm, easy reset in the middle of Manhattan.

The Astor Chinese Garden Court

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1000 5th Ave., New York
Thurs-Tues: 10am-5pm
Wed: Closed

The Astor Chinese Garden Court, on the second floor of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, is a full-scale re-creation of a traditional Ming dynasty-style scholar's garden. It's easy to miss, but once inside, it feels completely separate from the surrounding galleries. Designed in collaboration with artisans from Suzhou, China, the space follows classical garden principles—carefully placed rocks, water features, carved woodwork, and framed views. The sound of water, the enclosed courtyard, and the restrained palette create a restorative sense of quiet.

The Isamu Noguchi Foundation and Garden Museum

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9-01 33rd Rd, Astoria, New York
Mon-Tues: Closed
Wed-Sun: 11am-6pm

The garden at the Isamu Noguchi Museum is a serene outdoor courtyard designed by Isamu Noguchi as part of his museum in Long Island City. Unlike traditional sculpture gardens, it was conceived as a complete environment—where landscape, architecture, and artwork are all experienced together. The space is minimal and carefully composed, with stone, gravel, trees, and sculptures placed with precision—nothing is decorative, each element is there for a reason. Quiet and focused, it offers a different kind of museum experience than anywhere else in the city.

The Met Cloisters Gardens

The Met Cloisters Gardens

99 Margaret Corbin Dr., New York
Thurs-Tues: 10am-5pm
Wed: Closed

The Cloisters sits in Fort Tryon Park at the northern end of Manhattan and feels completely removed from the rest of the city. A branch of theMetropolitan Museum of Art, it's dedicated to medieval European art and architecture—the building itself is even assembled from elements of historic French monasteries. It's organized around a series of cloistered courtyards—open-air gardens enclosed by stone arcades—filled with herbs and plants that reflect medieval growing practices. Between the architecture, the gardens, and the views over the Hudson, it's one of the most transportive places in New York—less a typical museum or park than a step into a different time.

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