Exploring Manhattans bustling Lower East Side

Posted By tourar on December 9, 2009

The Lower East Side has traditionally been a low income area but the Lower East Side of Manhattan New York today offers a multicultural blend of down-to-earth bars and trendy upscale boutiques. The area has in recent year gone through a rapid gentrification and the National Trust for Historical Preservation now deems the neighbourhood as one of the most endagered places in the entire U.S. If you want to get a glimpse of what the area used to be before it is all boutiques and french cafes you should try to visit as soon as possible.

The Lower East Side has always been considered something of the bargain hunters paradise and this is where the New York garment industry first began its journey to success. With increasing rents the neighbourhood has had an influx of trendy shops and high-priced cutting-edge designers, but you can still enjoy marvellous bargain shopping along Orchad Street every Sunday afternoon. The blend of old and new, pricy and cheap, immigrant and yet so quintessentially American, makes the Lower East Side a bustling hub that attracts visitors and residents from all over the world.

The Lower East Side offer great nightlife and Ludlow St and Clinton St are good places to start since these street have the highest density of night clubs on the Lower East Side. For those interested in live music, the Bowery Ballroom on Delancey Street offer up the stage for alternative rock bands and visitors wishing to experience some live punk music should definitely head for C-Squat. There are also several bars such as arlene’s Grocery on Stanton ST and the Cake shop on Ludlow St that offers live music.

The Lower East Side is the cradle of the American Jewish culture in the United States Manhattan NYC; especially during the 19th and 20th century. Today the early Jewish immigrants and their descendants have largely been replaced by more recent newcomers with different cultural backgrounds, but you can still find vestiges of the neighbourhood’s Jewish heritage here, such as the shops lined up along Hester Street and Essex Street, a handful of kosher delis and bakeries, and the yeshiva day schools run by the Orthodox Jewish community. It is important to remember that Orthodox Jews will close their shops on saturdays and jewish holidays and you will have to consider this when you plan your trip.

Did you know that the legendary fake orgasm scene in “When Harry Met Sally” was shot in one of the eating establishments at Lower East Side? The scene was filmed in Katz’s Deli which is located on 205 E. Houston St; and you can still visit the eatery for a bit to eat or simply to have seen the eatery with your own eyes. This classic delicatessen serves a celebrated pastrami sandwich and the brisket is also to die for. Between Orchard St and Allen St on 137 E Houston St the hungry visitor will also find a bakery serving “The World’s Finest Knishes since 1910″ – Yonah Schimmel’s Knishes Bakery. This bakery is actually even older than that and has been selling knishes on Houston Street since 1890. It is now one of few distinctly Jewish bakeries in the neighbourhood.

Feel free to visit the museum in the Eldrige Street Synagogue which offers a lot of information about the culture, history and traditions of the jewish immigrants to the lower east side. Situated within the restored 1887 National Historic Landmark Eldridge Street Synagogue, the museum offers exhibits, guided tours and cultural events like concerts and film screenings. They also offer walking tours around the neighbourhood with guides that tell you about the neighbourhood. The museum offer free admittance ecery monday between 10 and 12 a.m.

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