newyork-visit

The Botanical Gardens - Tourist Attractions in Bronx, New York City

The Garden, Founded in 1891, is one of the world’s great collections of plants


Home » Attractions » Bronx » Botanical Gardens » info

The Botanical Garden

Getting Started

Index
Events Calendar
Attractions
Must See in New York
Getting in and around
Maps & Books
Seasons to visit

Travel Arrangements

Travel Arrangements
Compare Air Tickets
Book Suitable Hotels
Car Rentals
Sight Seeing

Tickets to Attractions

Tickets to Top Attractions
General Tickets
Broadway & Off-Broadway shows
City Pass
New York Pass
Sold Out Tickets

Entertainment

Art & Culture
Night Life
Restaurant Dining
TV Shows & Tapings
Sports

New York Deals

Free Admissions
Free Concerts
Internet DSL

Shopping

Where to Shop
Hot NYC Stores
New York Souvenirs
Shop Online

Boroughs

Bronx
  Bronx map
Brooklyn
Manhattan
Queens
Staten Island


Free Museums
Free Art Galleries
Free Concerts
New York Botanical Garden

The New York Botanical Garden is a prestigious botanical garden in New York City. One of the premier botanical gardens in the United States, it spans some 240 acres of Bronx Park in the borough of The Bronx and is home to some of the world's leading plant laboratories.

The Garden was founded in 1891 on part of the grounds of the Belmont Estate, formerly owned by the tobacco magnate Pierre Lorillard, after a fund-raising campaign led by Columbia University botanist Nathaniel Lord Britton, who was inspired to emulate the Royal Botanic Gardens in London.

The Garden is located at East 200th Street and Kazimiroff Boulevard and contains 48 different gardens and plant collections. Sightseers can easily spend a day admiring the serene cascade waterfall, wetlands and a 50 acre (200,000 m²) tract of never-harvested oaks, American beeches, cherry, birch, tulip and white ash trees - some more than two centuries old.


Video of New York Botanical Garden nature trail and waterfall during fall season


Garden highlights include an 1890s-vintage, wrought-iron framed, "crystal-palace style" greenhouse by Lord & Burnham; the Peggy Rockefeller memorial rose garden (originally laid out by Beatrix Farrand in 1916); a Japanese rock garden; a 37 acre (150,000 m²) conifer collection extensive research facilities including a propagation center, 50,000-volume library, and an herbarium archive of over seven million botanical specimens dating back more than three centuries. At the heart of the Garden are 40 acres (162,000 m²) of virgin woodlands which represent the last stretch of the original forest which covered all of New York City before the arrival of European settlers in the 17th century. The forest itself is split by the Bronx River and includes a riverine canyon and rapids, and along its shores sits the landmark Lorillard snuff-grinding mill dating back to the 1840s.

The Pfizer Plant Research Laboratory, built with funding from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, New York State and New York City, and named for its largest private donor, is a major new research institution at the Garden that opened in 2006. The laboratory is a pure research institution, with projects more diverse than research in universities and pharmaceutical companies. The laboratory's research emphasis is on plant genomics, the study of how genes function in plant development. One question scientists hope to answer is Darwin's "abominable mystery"; when, where, and why flowering plants emerged. The laboratory's research also furthers the discipline of molecular systematics, the study of DNA as evidence that can reveal the evolutionary history and relationships of plant species. Staff scientists also study plant use in immigrant communities in New York City and the genetic mechanisms by which neurotoxins are produced in some plants, work that may be related to nerve disease in humans. A staff of 200 trains 42 doctoral students at a time from all over the world; since 1890s scientists from the New York Botanical Garden have mounted about 2,000 exploratory missions across the planet to collect plants in the wild. At the plant chemistry laboratory chemical compounds from plants are extracted to create a library of the chemistry of the world's plants and stored in a 768-square-foot DNA storage room with 20 freezers that store millions of specimens, including rare, endangered or extinct species. To protect them during winter power outages, there is a backup 300-kilowatt electric generator.



The New York Pass grants you free general admission to the Zoo.



Address

200th Street & Kazimiroff Blvd., Bronx, NY 10458-5126 (Located at Bronx River Parkway and Fordham Road) Phone: 718.817.8700
Opposite Bronx Zoo.

Directions

By Metro:
FROM MANHATTAN BY METRO-NORTH RAILROAD: Harlem Local Line from Grand Central Terminal to Botanical Garden Station- 22 minutes direct to the Garden gate. For information on Metro-North's discounted One Day Getaway to the Garden or for a train schedule, visit the MTA Web site.

By Subway:
FROM MANHATTAN BY SUBWAY: "D" or "4" train to Bedford Park Blvd. Walk southeast on Bedford Park Blvd. to the Garden (approx. 20-minute walk), or take the "Bx-26" bus to the Garden gate.



By Car:
FROM MANHATTAN (EAST SIDE): FDR Drive to the Triborough Bridge. After bridge, bear left and follow signs to the Bronx. Proceed to the Bruckner Expressway (I-278). Continue on Bruckner Expressway East to Bronx River Parkway North. Take Bronx River Parkway to Exit 7W, marked Fordham Road. Stay to the right, keeping the Garden on your right at all times. Follow around onto Southern (Kazimiroff) Boulevard and turn right at the next light into the Garden at Conservatory Gate (across the street from Fordham University).

FROM NEW JERSEY: George Washington Bridge to Henry Hudson Parkway North to Exit 24, Mosholu Parkway. Take Mosholu Parkway to the end, which is Southern (Kazimiroff) Boulevard. Turn right and pass two traffic lights. Continue around the Garden perimeter and turn left at the next light into the Garden at Conservatory Gate (across the street from Fordham University).

Hours

The Garden is open year-round, Tuesday to Sunday.
Closed Mondays
Open on Monday federal holidays
Closed Thanksgiving and Christmas

April to October: 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Note: The Garden closes at 2 p.m. on May 22 and June 7.

November to March: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Admission

Grounds admission is free to everyone all day Wednesdays and on Saturdays from 10 a.m.-12 p.m. (Fees for all other venues-Conservatory, Children's Adventure Garden, etc.-still apply at these times.)

Combination Ticket
Pay once and save! This discounted ticket includes admission to the Garden grounds (mandatory entry fee), Enid A. Haupt Conservatory, Everett Children's Adventure Garden, Rock and Native Plant Gardens (open April-October), Tram Tour, and other tours/demonstrations. (Valid for 1 day / 1 visitor.)

Adults: $13
Seniors: $11
Students (with valid ID): $11
Children 2-12: $5
Children under 2: Free

Off-Peak Pricing: . Tuesdays-Thursdays through December 22: Adults $13 . Seniors/Students $11 . Children $5
Peak Pricing: . Fridays-Sundays through December 18 . Every day (Mondays-Sundays) from December 23 through January 8 . Adults $16 . Seniors/Students $14 . Children $5

The New York Pass grants you free general admission to the Zoo.



This is NYC

NYC's lifeline

City involvement with surface transit began in September 1919. Today a $2.00 one-way trip will take you anywhere regardless of the distance traveled.

New York MTA
New York Transit Museum
New York Transit Museum Gallery & Store

New York Central Park

Central Park covers 843 acres or 6% of Manhattan. From famous statues to castles, there is so much to see within this pastoral landmark.

New York Central Park
New York City Parks Events

Sports in the City

Enhance your knowledge of NYC sports history or check out all of the fantastic venues that NYC has to offer.

New York City Sports
US Open Tennis
New York City Triathlon
New York City Marathon





Tribute in Light

The ethereal Tribute in Light memorial was designed to help lessen the aching loss felt across the country since 9/11. It is a profound symbol of strength, hope and resiliency.

The New Yankee Stadium

New Yankee Stadium is the working title for a new stadium for the New York Yankees, currently under construction. It will open in 2009, replacing the third-oldest stadium in the Major Leagues.

The Bronx

In popular culture 'The Bronx' has often symbolized violence, decay, and urban ruin. In fact, there are guidebooks that say you must never go to the Bronx! Sheer ignorance, that is all we have to say!
Interactive Bronx map



Live Eyes

New York Newspapers

Niagara Falls Express: Overnight Tour from New York Romance Over Manhattan Private Helicopter Flight

home | get listed | privacy policy | site map back to top

Quick Links to 5 Boroughs » Manhattan | Bronx | Brooklyn | Queens | Staten Island

Website: © 2004-08 NewYork-Visit.com All Rights Reserved. Permission must be secured prior to duplication of any content, including images.
All Photos: © 2000-2007 Nishanth Gopinathan | StockPhotographs.org, unless otherwise credited. All International Rights Reserved.

Hosting: PixvieweRTM Web Hosting | Web Design: Live EyesTM (LiveEyes.org)