Hop Spots

Here is a list of some of the major New York City nightclubs and lounges in the New York City area. Not every nightclub is listed because we only choose the ones we feel that really contribute to the club scene.


Guestlist is available for venues marked with an*

BUY YOUR TICKETS FOR NEW YEARS EVE

2i's
Club 17

Club 58 (The old club Au Bar)
Club 9 1/2
Club Aer
Anju
Club Apt
Au Bar (Reopend as Club 58)
Club Avalon
Club Baktun
Club Bed
Bowery Bar
Club Blis
Club BLVD
Club Bungalow 8
Butter
Club Cain
Canal Room
Capitale
Club Centro-Fly (Going to Reopen as Club Duvet)
Chetty Red
Club Cielo
Cipriani
China Club
Club Coda
Club Copacabana
Club Coral Room
Club Cotton
Club Cream (Reopened as club Star.)
Club Crobar
Club Decade
Club Deep
Downtime
Dream Lounge
Duke and Duchess
Club El Flamingo
Club E'toile
Club Falucka
Filter 14
Club Float (Reopened as club Temple)

Club Flow
Flute
Club Gallery
Club Glo
Club Go (Reopened as Pink Elephant)
Green Room
GrooveJet (Reopened as Green Room)
Guernica

 

Museums

Metropolitan Museum of Art

"The Met is a universal museum: every category of art in every known medium from every part of the world during every epoch of recorded time is represented here and thus available for contemplation or study -- not in isolation but in comparison with other times, other cultures, and other media."

 

 

National Academy Museum and School of Fine Arts

The National Academy Museum and School of Fine Arts is one of the oldest artist-run organizations in the United States. Founded in 1825, they have always fostered the promotion of the Fine Arts in America, and house a sizeable collection of American Arts, over 8,000 works! Designated a New York City landmark, this elegant and stately six-story Beaux-Arts townhouse designed by Ogden Codman Jr. is one of the few remaining mansions on Fifth Avenue that is open to the public.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Museum of the City of New York

"The Museum of the City of New York is a private, not-for-profit, educational agency established in 1923 to collect, preserve, and present original materials related to the history of New York City. In addition to individual contributions and gifts from foundations and corporations, the Museum receives public funds from the New York State Council on the Arts, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the National Endowment for the Arts. The City of New York, the owner of the Museum's building, provides support in the form of operating and programmatic funds through the Department of Cultural Affairs."
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