The wooden houses on storybook Sylvan Terrace – resplendent with their high narrow stoops, dentiled canopies and boldly paneled wooden doors – constitute NYC’s first attempt at building affordable abodes for workers. The street itself is graced by its original late-19th-century gas lamps, while its cobblestones are Belgian, not Dutch, as is the case in Lower Manhattan and Brooklyn.
Sylvan Terrace
Lonely Planet's must-see attractions
4.03 MILES
What started with a handful of paintings brought over from Europe or donated by a coterie of philanthropically minded robber barons in the 19th century…
3.87 MILES
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10.72 MILES
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6.43 MILES
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9.24 MILES
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3.7 MILES
A New York icon, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, more commonly known as the Guggenheim, is an internationally-renowned art museum and one of the most…
11.46 MILES
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National September 11 Memorial Museum
9.33 MILES
When the twin towers of the World Trade Center toppled during the awful events of 11 September 2001, it led to years of soul-searching about what would be…
Nearby attractions
0.02 MILES
Along 10 to 18 Jumel Terrace stands a row of town houses, designed in the 1890s by the renowned architect Henri Fouchaux. At No 16 lived prolific…
2. Morris-Jumel Mansion Museum
0.04 MILES
Built in 1765 as a country retreat for Roger and Mary Morris, this columned mansion is the oldest house in Manhattan. It is also famous for having briefly…
0.07 MILES
When completed in 1916, this brick beaux-arts giant was Washington Heights’ first luxury apartment complex, with a concierge, a separate workers' entrance…
4. Hispanic Society of America Museum & Library
0.36 MILES
Housed in a beaux-arts structure that naturalist John James Audubon once called home, this treasure contains the largest collection of 19th-century…
0.77 MILES
The Boston Red Sox like to talk about their record of nine World Series championships in the last 90 years…well, the Yankees have won a mere 27 in that…
6. Convent Avenue Baptist Church
0.8 MILES
A lovely Gothic-style church offering traditional Baptist services since the 1940s. Morning congregations are fairly dressy.
7. Hamilton Heights Historic District
0.91 MILES
Two parallel streets in Hamilton Heights – Convent Ave and Hamilton Tce – contain a landmark stretch of historic limestone and brownstone town houses from…
1.01 MILES
This Federal-style retreat belonged to Founding Father Alexander Hamilton, who owned a 32-acre country estate here in the early 1800s. Unfortunately,…