Bryant Park
Another success story in the push for urban redevelopment, Bryant Park is the latest incarnation of a 4-acre site that was, at various times in its history, a graveyard and a reservoir. Named for poet and
New York Evening Post editor William Cullen Bryant (look for his statue on the east end), the park actually rests atop the New York Public Library's many miles of underground stacks. Another statue is also notable: a squat and evocative stone portrait of Gertrude Stein, one of the few outdoor sculptures of women in the city. This simple green swath, just east of Times Square, is welcome relief from Midtown's concrete, taxi-choked jungle, and good weather attracts brown-baggers from neighboring office buildings. Just behind the library is
Bryant Park Grill (tel.
212/840-6500), a gorgeous, airy bistro with spectacular views but merely decent New American food. Still, brunch is a good bet, and the grill's two summer alfresco restaurants --
The Terrace, on the Grill's roof, and the casual
Cafe, with small tables beneath a canopy of trees -- are extremely pleasant on a nice day.
Le Carrousel complements the park's French classical style. It's not as big as the Central Park Carousel but utterly charming nonetheless, with 14 different animals that revolve to the sounds of French cabaret music. Le Carrousel is open all year, weather permitting, Thursday to Sunday 11:30am to 6pm, and costs $2 per ride. From mid-October until mid-January, you can skate (for free!) on a seasonal ice rink called
The Pond. Additionally, the park plays host to New York's
Seventh on Sixth fashion shows, set up in billowy tents (open to the trade only) in the spring and fall.
Copyright: Excerpted from
Frommer's New York City 2009, (c) 2008, Wiley Publishing, Inc.

New York
, USA