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Explore Gramercy Park
The district Gramercy Park of in New York County (New York) is located in United States about 206 mi north-east of Washington DC, the country's capital.
If you need a place to sleep, we compiled a list of available hotels close to the map centre further down the page.
Depending on your travel schedule, you might want to pay a visit to some of the following locations: Manhattan, Jersey City, Brooklyn, Hackensack and Queens. To further explore this place, just scroll down and browse the available info.
Local weather forecast
Todays Local Weather Conditions & Forecast: 13°C / 55 °F
Morning Temperature | 7°C / 45 °F |
Evening Temperature | 12°C / 54 °F |
Night Temperature | 10°C / 49 °F |
Chance of rainfall | 0% |
Air Humidity | 37% |
Air Pressure | 1032 hPa |
Wind Speed | Gentle Breeze with 9 km/h (5 mph) from North-West |
Cloud Conditions | Clear sky, covering 0% of sky |
General Conditions | Sky is clear |
Saturday, 27th of April 2024
13°C (55 °F)
12°C (53 °F)
Overcast clouds, moderate breeze.
Sunday, 28th of April 2024
15°C (59 °F)
15°C (59 °F)
Light rain, gentle breeze, overcast clouds.
Monday, 29th of April 2024
18°C (65 °F)
14°C (57 °F)
Light rain, gentle breeze, overcast clouds.
Hotels and Places to Stay
Gramercy Park Hotel
THE INN AT IRVING PLACE
W New York Union Square
The New York EDITION
James NoMad formerly Carlton
Royalton Park Avenue
The Nomad Hotel
MySuites - Gramercy Suites
HOTEL GIRAFFE
Flatiron Hotel
Videos from this area
These are videos related to the place based on their proximity to this place.
Big Apple BBQ 2011 (the day before)
Big Apple BBQ 2011 They arrive from all over the country, driving hundreds if not thousands of miles. To work the next 36 hours straight then drive back home. Just to bring us some of...
Big Apple Cogers - First Meeting!
The International Debate Education Association (idebate.org) is affiliating with the Cogers (cogers.org) to hold a FREE monthly debate event in NYC. The Society of Cogers was founded in the...
Parc East Apartments - New York CIty - 18H - 3 Bedroom
The newly renovated Parc East apartment community is located between Gramercy Park and Murray Hill in Manhattan. Walking distance to the Empire State Building, Madison Square Garden, 3rd ...
New York City - Video tour of a furnished apartment on Park Avenue South (Midtown East, Manhattan)
Welcome to another New York Habitat video tour of a furnished apartment in New York City ( http://www.nyhabitat.com ). Today, we will be touring an outstanding fully furnished one-bedroom apartment.
8th Avenue-bound R160A L Train@14th Street/Union Square
Here's an 8th Avenue-bound R160A L train as it arrives at 14th Street/Union Square Train Transfers:4,5,6,N,Q,R Trains.
Michio Kaku: What's the Fate of the Universe? It's in the Dark Matter
Why should you bother to wake up tomorrow knowing that we're all going to die billions and billions of years from now when the universe turns to absolute zero, when the stars blink out, when...
Bee Yummy - East Village Skin Care
The best kept secret in the natural skin care world. This edible, hand-made live live signature product Bee Yummy. Christopher Debrowolski the creator of this amazing skin product made from...
The Men Who Dine visit Ngam Thai Restaurant in NYC's East Village
We had an awesome time visiting Ngam Restaurant recently. The food, service & dancing were great! Here's a little video we did! Enjoy!
Videos provided by Youtube are under the copyright of their owners.
Attractions and noteworthy things
Distances are based on the centre of the city/town and sightseeing location. This list contains brief abstracts about monuments, holiday activities, national parcs, museums, organisations and more from the area as well as interesting facts about the region itself. Where available, you'll find the corresponding homepage. Otherwise the related wikipedia article.
Max's Kansas City
Max's Kansas City was a nightclub and restaurant at 213 Park Avenue South, in New York City, which became a gathering spot for musicians, poets, artists and politicians in the 1960s and 1970s. It was opened by Mickey Ruskin (1933–1983) in December 1965.
23rd Street (IRT Lexington Avenue Line)
23rd Street is a local station on the IRT Lexington Avenue Line of the New York City Subway. Located at the intersection of Park Avenue South and 23rd Street in Manhattan, it is served by 6 trains at all times, <6> trains during weekdays in the peak direction, and 4 trains during late night hours.
18th Street (IRT Lexington Avenue Line)
18th Street was a local station on the IRT Lexington Avenue Line of the New York City Subway, located on Park Avenue South and 18th Street.
Friends Seminary
Friends Seminary is a private day school in Manhattan. It is owned and controlled by the New York Quarterly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends. The school, the oldest continuous coeducational school in New York City, serves 694 college-bound day students in Kindergarten through Grade 12. The school's mission is to prepare students “not only for the world that is, but to help them bring about the world that ought to be.
New York Film Academy
New York Film Academy - School of Film and Acting (NYFA) is an international film school and acting school based in New York City. It was originally located at the Tribeca Film Center. In 1994, NYFA moved to Union Square, in a large building which once housed the New York political machine Tammany Hall. As of 2012, the school has 400+ employees and over 6,000 students per year.
George Washington Hotel (New York City)
The George Washington Hotel was a hotel and boarding house located at 23 Lexington Avenue in New York City. The building was occupied by many famous writers, musicians, and poets including W. H. Auden and Christopher Isherwood who lived there in the 1930s. In the late 1960s, Minoru Yamasaki and a team of architects drafted the early plans for the World Trade Center in a suite at the George Washington.
Promotion Marketing Association, Inc
The Promotion Marketing Association (PMA) is an advocacy group and trade association for the promotion and integrated marketing sector. It seeks to "be the voice of the promotion industry, recognized and relied upon as the primary resource of promotion education, information and interaction for marketers. " The PMA is the national non-profit trade association dedicated to the industry of marketing disciplines that motivate behavior, activate response and build brands.
National Arts Club
The National Arts Club is a private club in Gramercy Park, Manhattan, New York City. It was founded in 1898 by Charles DeKay, an art and literary critic of the New York Times to "stimulate, foster, and promote public interest in the arts and to educate the American people in the fine arts". Since 1906 the organization has occupied the Samuel J. Tilden House, a landmarked Victorian Gothic Revival brownstone at 15 Gramercy Park, next door to the The Players, a club with similar interests.
Gramercy Park Hotel
Gramercy Park Hotel is a luxury hotel located at 2 Lexington Avenue, in the Gramercy Park neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City, adjacent to Gramercy Park. It is known for its rich history.
Washington Irving High School (New York City)
The Washington Irving Campus, formerly Washington Irving High School, is located at 40 Irving Place between East 16th and 17th Streets in the Gramercy Park neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City, near Union Square. It is a New York City public school facility run by the city's Department of Education.
Pete's Tavern
Pete's Tavern, located at 129 East 18th Street on the corner of Irving Place in the Gramercy Park neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City, is a pub food restaurant and one of several drinking establishments which each claim to be the oldest continuously operated tavern in the city.
St. George's Episcopal Church (Manhattan)
St. George's Episcopal Church is a historic church located at 209 East 16th Street at Rutherford Place, on Stuyvesant Square in Manhattan, New York City. Called "one of the first and most significant examples of Early Romanesque Revival church architecture in America", the church exterior was designed by Charles Otto Blesch and the interior by Leopold Eidlitz. It is one of the two sanctuaries of the Calvary-St. George's Parish.
Union Square Theatre
Union Square Theater is an Off-Broadway theatre, owned by Reading International, which also owns Reading Entertainment. The theatre is located in New York City at 100 East 17th Street, Manhattan. Coordinates: {{#invoke:Coordinates|coord}}{{#coordinates:40|44|11|N|73|59|20|W|type:landmark_region:US-NY |primary |name= }}
Old Town Bar and Restaurant
The Old Town Bar and Restaurant is a noted bar and restaurant located between Park and Broadway on 18th Street in Manhattan's Flatiron district in New York City. In continuous operation since 1892, it is one of the oldest bars in the New York City area. The Old Town is two blocks north of Union Square, at 45 East 18th Street.
Gramercy Theatre
Gramercy Theatre is a music venue in Manhattan.
Sanford–Brown Institute New York
The Sanford-Brown Institute, founded in 1977, is a for-profit postsecondary learning institution with 13 campuses in seven states. SBI – New York offers programs in a variety of healthcare professions. Classes are offered days, evenings and weekends. Full-time students may complete one of the six programs at Sanford-Brown – New York in 9 to 20 months.
23rd Street (IRT Third Avenue Line)
23rd Street was an express station on the demolished IRT Third Avenue Line. It had two levels. The lower level was served by local trains and had two tracks and two side platforms. It was built first. The upper level was built as part of the Dual Contracts and had one track with two side platforms and served express trains. The next stop to the north was 28th Street for local trains and 34th Street for express trains.
18th Street (IRT Third Avenue Line)
18th Street was a local station on the demolished IRT Third Avenue Line. It had two levels. The lower level was served by local trains and had two tracks and two side platforms. It was built first. The upper level was built as part of the Dual Contracts and had one track that bypassed the station and served express trains. The next stop to the north was 23rd Street. The next stop to the south was 14th Street. The station closed on May 12, 1955.
Hotel Kenmore Hall
Hotel Kenmore Hall is a 22-story single room occupancy hotel located at 145 East 23rd Street in the Gramercy section of Manhattan, designed by architect Maurice Deutsch and constructed in 1927. Author Nathanael West lived and worked at the hotel as a night manager in the early years after the hotel opened; one of West's real-life experiences at the hotel inspired the incident between Romola Martin and Homer Simpson that would later appear in The Day of the Locust (1939).
Peoples Improv Theater
The Peoples Improv Theater, or The P.I.T. , was established in New York City in 2002 by Ali Farahnakian. The PIT's shows include improvisational comedy and sketch comedy.
Calvary Church (Manhattan)
Calvary Church is an Episcopal church located at 277 Park Avenue South on the corner of East 21st Street in the Gramercy Park neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City, on the border of the Flatiron District. It was designed by James Renwick, Jr. , the architect who designed St. Patrick's Cathedral and Grace Church, and was completed in 1848. The church complex is located within the Gramercy Park Historic District and Extension. It is one of the two sanctuaries of the Calvary-St. George's Parish.
Calvary-St. George's Parish
Calvary-St. George's Parish is an Episcopal parish in Manhattan, New York City. It was formed in 1976 from the merger of the parishes of three churches which were in close proximity: St.
East 17th Street/Irving Place Historic District
The East 17th Street/Irving Place Historic District is a small historic district located primarily on East 17th Street between Union Square East and Irving Place in the Union Square neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City.
New York City Police Academy
New York City Police Academy and the Training Bureau
Lyceum Theatre (New York, 1885–1902)
The Lyceum Theatre operated on Manhattan’s Fourth Avenue (now Park Ave. South) between 23rd and 24th Streets, from 1885 to 1902, when it was torn down to make way for the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company Tower and replaced by the Lyceum Theatre on 45th Street. For most of its existence, the theatre was home to Daniel Frohman’s Lyceum Theatre Stock Company, which presented many important plays and actors of the day.