
Steve: Ask ten New Yorkers where they would choose to spend a Saturday if they had nowhere in particular to be, and I think few people that don’t live there would answer “the Upper East Side.” In fact, many locals also clear out, heading to the Hamptons or genteel beach clubs closer to the city.
The UES isn’t the trendiest neighborhood in Manhattan. It doesn’t have the best nightlife. It is not trying to reinvent itself every six months.
The UES is great because it still feels like a neighborhood. It is elegant without being showy, busy without feeling chaotic, and sophisticated without taking itself too seriously. It has grand museums and quiet blocks, glamorous avenues and quotidian side streets, world-class culture and the small daily rituals that make a place feel like home.
Perhaps most importantly, it does not really feel like one neighborhood at all.
The Upper East Side is a collection of smaller neighborhoods stitched together over generations. The grand apartment buildings along Fifth Avenue have a completely different personality than the quieter residential streets closer to the East River. Head Northeast and you find yourself in Yorkville, once a neighborhood defined by German immigrants. While much of that history has faded, Yorkville still carries a distinct personality from the more polished blocks closer to Central Park.
That combination of history, culture, food, and everyday neighborhood life is what keeps drawing me back.
