Flushing Meadows Corona Park


Central Queens' biggest attraction is this 1225-acre park, built for the 1939 World’s Fair and dominated by Queens’ most famous landmark, the stainless-steel Unisphere – it's the world’s biggest globe: 120ft high and weighing 380 tons. Facing it is the former New York City Building, now home to the fantastic Queens Museum.

Just south are three weather-worn, Cold War–era New York State Pavilion Towers, part of the New York State Pavilion for the 1964 World’s Fair. (You may recognize them as alien spaceships from the film Men in Black.) If entering the park from the north, via the 7 train, look for the 1964 World’s Fair mosaics by Salvador Dalí and Andy Warhol. Also nearby is Citi Field, and the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center. Head west over the Grand Central Pkwy to find a few more attractions, including the New York Hall of Science. The park has sports grounds, too, on its eastern and southern edges. The top-notch Astroturf soccer fields are popular for organized and pick-up soccer, and there’s a pitch-and-putt golf course that’s lit up for golfers at night.


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Nearby attractions

1. Unisphere

0.06 MILES

Designed for the 1964 World's Fair, this 12-story-high stainless-steel globe is the focal point of Flushing Meadows Park, and the de facto icon of Queens…

2. Queens Museum

0.15 MILES

The Queens Museum is one of the city's most unexpected pleasures. Its most famous installation is the Panorama of New York City, a gob-smacking 9335-sq-ft…

3. New York Hall of Science

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Occupying a weird 1965 building, rippling with stained glass, this science museum is unapologetically nerdy. An outdoor mini-golf course and North America…

4. Louis Armstrong House

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5. Greater Astoria Historical Society

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6. Museum of the Moving Image

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7. Kaufman Arts District

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8. Vanderende-Onderdonk House

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