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Japanese Tour!! "Museum-Hopping Tour" visiting both Metropolitan museum and MoMA museum with official museum guide.

Aperçu
Our official museum guide will make your museum visitation more fun, and less dutiful. If you join this tour, you can get insider tips about one of the world's greatest collections of modern and contemporary art.
Ville: La ville de New York
Sat 12 Apr
i
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À partir de $167.00
Sat 12 Apr
À partir de $167.00
Faire une réservation
Ce qui est inclu
Japanese guide service, transportation, observation ticket, museum tickets, tax
Japanese guide service, transportation, observation ticket, museum tickets, tax
Information additionnelle
  • Infants and small children can ride in a pram or stroller
  • Public transportation options are available nearby
  • Specialized infant seats are available
  • Suitable for all physical fitness levels
À quoi s'attendre
1
Times Square
Our Japanese museum guide will show you at New York Hilton Midtown. At MET, ou can appreciate splendors of ancient Egypt, plus armor and weapons of sculptural and ornamental beauty from Europe, the Middle East, Asia and America.
2
Meatpacking District
In MoMA museum,walk through the each galleries you can see masterpieces such as Salvador Dalí's The Persistence of Memory, Vincent van Gogh's The Starry Night, and Pablo Picasso's Les Demoiselles d'Avignon.
3
Greenwich Village
It is the largest artist village in the United States. It has long been a beloved city by literary greats such as O. Henry and Mark Twain, and artists such as Andy Warhol and Lichtenstein. There are also many jazz clubs famous for music. The reason why many artists still live in this city is probably because of the city's liberal traditions. Many homosexuals, including gays and lesbians, also live in this city.
4
SoHo
The movies 9 1/2 and Ghost tell the whole story about this town. Many painters live here, and there are many galleries and studios. However, in recent years, art has become more commercialized, and rents in Soho have skyrocketed. It is no longer a town where aspiring artists can live. Soho was a district of factories and warehouses in the late 19th century, and most of the buildings made of cast iron remain.
5
Little Italy
New York is a city of immigrants. It is called a melting pot of races, and you may forget that you are in America. It is the oldest part of New York, and was the first area where German and Irish immigrants lived in the past. There are many Italian pasta restaurants and cafes. In recent years, the number of Chinese immigrants has increased so much that they are pushing up the Italian area.
6
The National 9/11 Memorial & Museum
This is the site of the World Trade Center, which collapsed in the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. The Twin Towers were designed by a Japanese-American, Mr. Yamazaki. It is a sad event to remember, but New Yorkers and other human beings have overcome the difficulties and are now building a new giant building. Please come here and forget about everything and pray for peace.
7
Wall Street
This was the original defensive wall that separated the area where the Dutch lived from the area where the Indians lived in the north of Manhattan. The defensive wall is the origin of the name Wall Street. It was just a wooden wall, but no one would have imagined that it would become the home of the first Capitol building of the United States and later the center of global finance. You can see the New York Stock Exchange and Federal Hall.
8
Battery Park City
This is the southernmost park in Manhattan. Many street performers gather here. Ferries to the Statue of Liberty Island depart from here. Ferries to Staten Island also depart from next door. It was originally Fort Clinton, where cannons were lined up to fight the British Navy during the Revolutionary War, and is called the Battery from the word battery.
9
Whitehall
When you board the Staten Island Ferry, you will first gather at the stern. As you leave Manhattan, the skyscrapers of Wall Street will appear before your eyes. What do you think? Skyscrapers floating in the water, isn't it a spectacular sight? If you move away a little, you will see the Statue of Liberty on your right. This is the scene that Jack dreams of reaching New York in the movie Titanic. Make sure to press the shutter when the Statue comes in front of you before passing by.
10
Brooklyn Bridge
Next, you will cross the magnificent Brooklyn Bridge, which can be considered a work of art, and see the postcard-like Manhattan landscape from the opposite bank of Brooklyn (the night view is also beautiful). The key point is to have the Brooklyn Bridge included in your photo.
11
Dumbo
DUMBO is an abbreviation of "Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass". In the 1890s, Fulton, who invented the steam locomotive, used the Fulton Ferry as a ferry boat here until this bridge was built. At the time, it was mainly an industrial area with machinery and paper box manufacturing factories and warehouses for storing products. However, due to the hollowing out of manufacturing, it became a residential area in the 1970s, and it was around that time that it started to be called DUMBO. Land prices have been rising since around 2000, and now it is a strange landscape where luxury apartments stand side by side with fashionable stores that have been renovated from old warehouses. You may take a break here to enjoy the view and have lunch.
12
United Nations Headquarters
After the war, the headquarters of the League of Nations was decided to be located in New York, with Rockefeller Jr. purchasing and donating the land. It houses major organizations such as the United Nations General Assembly and the Social Security Board. If you go a little further away, you can get a good shot of the 40-story building. Also, right in front of you is Trump's 90-story apartment building. I heard that Yankees shortstop Jitters lives on the top floor.
13
Central Park
The tour will finish in the area around Midtown, within walking distance of Central Park, near the United Nations, or at any point along the way. *The full-day city tour (complete version) still continues!
14
Times Square
Our Japanese museum guide will show you at New York Hilton Midtown. At MET, ou can appreciate splendors of ancient Egypt, plus armor and weapons of sculptural and ornamental beauty from Europe, the Middle East, Asia and America.
15
Meatpacking District
In MoMA museum,walk through the each galleries you can see masterpieces such as Salvador Dalí's The Persistence of Memory, Vincent van Gogh's The Starry Night, and Pablo Picasso's Les Demoiselles d'Avignon.
16
Greenwich Village
It is the largest artist village in the United States. It has long been a beloved city by literary greats such as O. Henry and Mark Twain, and artists such as Andy Warhol and Lichtenstein. There are also many jazz clubs famous for music. The reason why many artists still live in this city is probably because of the city's liberal traditions. Many homosexuals, including gays and lesbians, also live in this city.
17
SoHo
The movies 9 1/2 and Ghost tell the whole story about this town. Many painters live here, and there are many galleries and studios. However, in recent years, art has become more commercialized, and rents in Soho have skyrocketed. It is no longer a town where aspiring artists can live. Soho was a district of factories and warehouses in the late 19th century, and most of the buildings made of cast iron remain.
18
Little Italy
New York is a city of immigrants. It is called a melting pot of races, and you may forget that you are in America. It is the oldest part of New York, and was the first area where German and Irish immigrants lived in the past. There are many Italian pasta restaurants and cafes. In recent years, the number of Chinese immigrants has increased so much that they are pushing up the Italian area.
19
The National 9/11 Memorial & Museum
This is the site of the World Trade Center, which collapsed in the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. The Twin Towers were designed by a Japanese-American, Mr. Yamazaki. It is a sad event to remember, but New Yorkers and other human beings have overcome the difficulties and are now building a new giant building. Please come here and forget about everything and pray for peace.
20
Wall Street
This was the original defensive wall that separated the area where the Dutch lived from the area where the Indians lived in the north of Manhattan. The defensive wall is the origin of the name Wall Street. It was just a wooden wall, but no one would have imagined that it would become the home of the first Capitol building of the United States and later the center of global finance. You can see the New York Stock Exchange and Federal Hall.
21
Battery Park City
This is the southernmost park in Manhattan. Many street performers gather here. Ferries to the Statue of Liberty Island depart from here. Ferries to Staten Island also depart from next door. It was originally Fort Clinton, where cannons were lined up to fight the British Navy during the Revolutionary War, and is called the Battery from the word battery.
22
Whitehall
When you board the Staten Island Ferry, you will first gather at the stern. As you leave Manhattan, the skyscrapers of Wall Street will appear before your eyes. What do you think? Skyscrapers floating in the water, isn't it a spectacular sight? If you move away a little, you will see the Statue of Liberty on your right. This is the scene that Jack dreams of reaching New York in the movie Titanic. Make sure to press the shutter when the Statue comes in front of you before passing by.
23
Brooklyn Bridge
Next, you will cross the magnificent Brooklyn Bridge, which can be considered a work of art, and see the postcard-like Manhattan landscape from the opposite bank of Brooklyn (the night view is also beautiful). The key point is to have the Brooklyn Bridge included in your photo.
24
Dumbo
DUMBO is an abbreviation of "Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass". In the 1890s, Fulton, who invented the steam locomotive, used the Fulton Ferry as a ferry boat here until this bridge was built. At the time, it was mainly an industrial area with machinery and paper box manufacturing factories and warehouses for storing products. However, due to the hollowing out of manufacturing, it became a residential area in the 1970s, and it was around that time that it started to be called DUMBO. Land prices have been rising since around 2000, and now it is a strange landscape where luxury apartments stand side by side with fashionable stores that have been renovated from old warehouses. You may take a break here to enjoy the view and have lunch.
25
United Nations Headquarters
After the war, the headquarters of the League of Nations was decided to be located in New York, with Rockefeller Jr. purchasing and donating the land. It houses major organizations such as the United Nations General Assembly and the Social Security Board. If you go a little further away, you can get a good shot of the 40-story building. Also, right in front of you is Trump's 90-story apartment building. I heard that Yankees shortstop Jitters lives on the top floor.
26
Central Park
The tour will finish in the area around Midtown, within walking distance of Central Park, near the United Nations, or at any point along the way. *The full-day city tour (complete version) still continues!
Show 23 plus d'arrêts
Politique d'annulation
All sales are final. No refund is available for cancellations.

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