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Fort Tryon Park

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Fort Tryon Park

Fort Tryon Park is Best known for the beautiful tapestries on display, the Cloisters also offer architectural installations, a series of special programs, and fantastic views of the Hudson. The building incorporates elements from five medieval French cloisters–quadrangles enclosed by a roofed or vaulted passageway, or arcade–and from other monastic sites in southern France.

Fort Tryon Park sits atop a wooded hill that offers panoramic views of the Hudson River on one side and Upper Manhattan and the Bronx on the other. Named after the last British governor of colonial New York, Fort Tryon Park was a collaborative effort by John D. Rockefeller, Jr., philanthropist and heir to the Standard Oil fortune, and Frederick Law Olmstead, Jr., the son of one of the creator’s of Central Park.

Best See Attractions
The Cloisters: A branch of the Metropolitan Museum of Art that specializes in Romanesque and Gothic art and history. To give visitors a true “spatial experience” entire sanctuaries and courtyards imported from churches and monasteries in Western Europe were painstakingly rebuilt and integrated into the modern building, itself a tribute to architecture of the period.

Special Events
• Each October, the Washington Heights and Inwood Development Corporation and the New York City Dept. of Parks and Recreation hold the Medieval Festival at Fort Tryon Park. This half-day fair (noon-6pm) transforms the park into a medieval marketplace and introduces visitors to medieval customs, food, music and pageantry.

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