NYC

Page Overview

A practical NYC guide for transit, Broadway, airports, and museums.

Transit

Start with official MTA planning tools, then narrow down station logic around Grand Central and Central Park

Grand Central

Grand Central to Central Park

Grand Central Terminal connects to 42 St–Grand Central, with subway access to the 4, 5, 6, 7, and the Shuttle, plus buses.

For the east side of Central Park, the uptown 6 is the cleanest default. Useful official 6-line stops for park access include 68 St–Hunter College, 77 St, 86 St, and 96 St.

For the west side / Central Park West, the B/C line serves 72 St, 81 St–Museum of Natural History, and 86 St, which usually means planning around a transfer from Grand Central rather than expecting a direct ride.

Real-Time Data

Live data and later API build-out

This section is the future bridge from static planning into live service data. The right current sources are MTA’s official developer resources and public-facing operational tools.

Amtrak

Northeast Corridor planning

For intercity rail into and out of New York, keep the official Amtrak timetable, Acela overview, and train-tracking tools in the same planning kit as the subway and terminal resources.

Museums

Keep the city logistics here, and push museum depth into a dedicated NYC museums page

Museum Hub

NYC museums page

The dedicated museums guide now holds the museum-heavy planning and research sections for The Met, MoMA, Cooper Hewitt, Guggenheim, Whitney, the Schwarzman Building, and the Morgan.

Highlights

What moved over

The Met and MoMA content now lives with the rest of the NYC museum network, so this page can stay focused on how to move through the city rather than holding every museum reference inline.

Broadway

Use official district maps and live show directories together if you need both theatre context and what is actually playing now through the end of 2026

Airports

JFK and LaGuardia are easiest to plan when you separate public transit, terminal logistics, and airline-specific terminal details

Public Transit

JFK to and from the city

The most useful official starting point is the MTA JFK guide, which lays out AirTrain connections to subway and LIRR access points rather than treating the airport as a single direct rail stop.

American

American at JFK Terminal 8

American’s JFK planning is cleaner if you treat Terminal 8 as the airline anchor, then use airport-wide JFK guidance for ground transport and pickup/drop-off details.