Jusnicky's Guidebook

Jusnicky
Jusnicky's Guidebook

Sightseeing

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Flushing Meadows Corona Park
Van Wyck Expressway
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Gantry Plaza State Park
4-44 47th Rd
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Museum

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MoMA PS1
22-25 Jackson Ave
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Shopping

Mall
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Queens Center
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Neighborhoods

https://www.thrillist.com/lifestyle/new-york/what-to-see-eat-and-do-in-long-island-city-in-nyc Recommend! Its where gantry park is as well
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Long Island City
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https://www.thrillist.com/lifestyle/new-york/what-to-see-eat-and-do-in-long-island-city-in-nyc Recommend! Its where gantry park is as well
Downtown Flushing is the largest urban center in Queens and home to the second largest Chinatown. The downtown sidewalks pulse with people of all nationalities but predominantly East Asians, specifically Chinese and Koreans. Signs in Chinese are at least as prominent as those in English. This Chinatown, though, is a real American fusion. For food, there's everything from McDonald's and Chinese seafood restaurants to street vendors selling fried noodles. For drinks, there are Irish bars, Starbucks, and bubble tea cafes. The shopping ranges from the standard Old Navy and upscale Benetton to Chinese bookstores, herbal medicine shops, Asian groceries, and music stores that stock the latest hits from Shanghai. Chinatown in Flushing is home to a vibrant middle class and blue-collar community and is wealthier than Chinatown in Manhattan. Until the 1970s Flushing was mostly an Italian and Greek neighborhood, but the downtown was shaken by the economic turmoil of the 1970s. People left Flushing and housing prices dropped. Korean and Chinese immigrants began to settle in Flushing by the late 1970s and have predominated since the 1980s.
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Flushing
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Downtown Flushing is the largest urban center in Queens and home to the second largest Chinatown. The downtown sidewalks pulse with people of all nationalities but predominantly East Asians, specifically Chinese and Koreans. Signs in Chinese are at least as prominent as those in English. This Chinatown, though, is a real American fusion. For food, there's everything from McDonald's and Chinese seafood restaurants to street vendors selling fried noodles. For drinks, there are Irish bars, Starbucks, and bubble tea cafes. The shopping ranges from the standard Old Navy and upscale Benetton to Chinese bookstores, herbal medicine shops, Asian groceries, and music stores that stock the latest hits from Shanghai. Chinatown in Flushing is home to a vibrant middle class and blue-collar community and is wealthier than Chinatown in Manhattan. Until the 1970s Flushing was mostly an Italian and Greek neighborhood, but the downtown was shaken by the economic turmoil of the 1970s. People left Flushing and housing prices dropped. Korean and Chinese immigrants began to settle in Flushing by the late 1970s and have predominated since the 1980s.

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During rush hour subway is always fastest!

For best experience take an uber to mets willets point train station and then hop on the Manhattan bound 7 train!