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Mac Rating: 0.00 | Votes: | Date: 03/06/2026 00:44:00

Few streets carry the symbolic weight that Fifth Avenue does in New York. Laid out as the Manhattan grid took shape in the early 1800s and generally dated to 1824, when its lower section reached Washington Square, the avenue first filled with the mansions of Gilded Age families before commerce gradually pushed the wealthy further uptown. What remained was a corridor that doubles as a roll-call of the city's landmarks and a global byword for luxury retail. Walking north, the route passes the Flatiron Building, the marble lions outside the New York Public Library, the Art Deco towers of Rockefeller Center with its winter skating rink, the spires of St Patrick's Cathedral and the Empire State Building. Between 49th and 60th Streets the focus shifts to shopping: Saks, Bergdorf Goodman, Tiffany and Co., Cartier and the glass cube of the Apple Store sit shoulder to shoulder, their seasonal window displays a draw in themselves. Further uptown, the stretch flanking Central Park between roughly 82nd and 105th Streets is known as Museum Mile, home to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Guggenheim and several other institutions. The avenue also doubles as a parade route, carrying the St Patrick's Day march each spring and the older Easter Parade tradition past the cathedral, while its southern end threads through Greenwich Village and Washington Square Park. The Plaza Hotel and Grand Army Plaza mark the corner where the shopping district gives way to Central Park. The avenue marked its 200th anniversary in 2024, and city planners have approved a major redesign that will widen pavements and curb traffic between Bryant Park and Central Park over the following years, partly reversing a century-old decision to narrow the sidewalks for cars. For visitors the appeal is less any single destination than the density of them, and the holiday season, when lights and window installations go up, tends to be the busiest and most photographed time to walk it. Crowds are heaviest around the holidays and on parade days, when whole sections close to traffic.

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