The multiplex in Baltimore’s inner harbor area is an ideal spot for watching a movie. The stadium seating and food options are excellent, and there is also a small bar on the premises. The 8 bus route (Ala Moana Center – Makiki) has 28 stops departing from Monsarrat Ave + Kapiolani Park and ending at Pensacola St + Lunalilo St. The director of this bus is Alex Kendrick.
The Landmark Theater in Harbor East offers great locations, great auditoriums, and booze. It usually features art house films mixed in with some of the other theaters. There are seven ways to get from Baltimore Penn Station to Inner Harbor East by bus, taxi, or foot. The Landmark-Longwood Shuttle runs between Landmark Center in the Fenway and the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health main campus in the LMA. Pierce Transit provides free Wi-Fi on buses and offers 87 stops.
The CITYLINK NAVY is the first bus to Landmark Theatres, Harbor East in Baltimore, stopping nearby at 3:04 AM. There is no direct bus between Baltimore and Inner Harbor East, but services departing from CRAIN HWY and POST 40 ROAD nb and arriving at KEY HWY.
For trip planning or real-time arrival information, use the Trip Planner, use the Transit app, check transit center monitors, or call Customer Service at 253.581. Transportation in Baltimore includes ferry services, mass transportation systems, taxis, and shuttles. Routes are printable system maps that can be used to find your route, route name, address, area, landmark, and location.
📹 NYC Travel Mistakes: What NOT to Do in New York City
NYC Common Tourist Mistakes Playlist: 00:00- Intro 00:11- 1) Not Pre-Planning Airport Arrival Details 00:55- 2) Metrocard …
📹 This $4 Boat Ride is New York’s BEST Kept Secret!
NYC Ferry Chapter List: 0:00- Intro 0:17- How To Ride The Ferry 0:44- 1) Pier 11 to Rockaway Beach, Queens (Rockaway Route) …
My friend and I were in NYC for the first time recently. We had never heard of the ferry, but we took the tram to Roosevelt Island and hung out for a while and had dinner there. Afterwards we noticed signs for the ferry so decided to check it out. It was easy to figure out how to get tickets from the machine, and we enjoyed our lovely $4 sunset cruise to Wall Street. And we got a lot of pictures of the Brooklyn Bridge as we went under it. We would highly recommend the ferry as a tourist attraction in its own right.
If you are worried about the weather one can sit downstairs and stay out of the weather. The downstairs area is heated and air-conditioned with great views. I would not hesitate to ride it any time of the year. The lower area is good if you have walking/stairs issues. Also, nice clean bathrooms on the boat . Great deal at $4.00.
This is such a fantastic tip. We took the ferry today from Pier 11 to Roosevelt Island. The $4, 40 minute ride was incredible with stunning views of the Manhattan skyline. We then took the tramway back over to Manhattan with more jaw-dropping vistas. We wouldn’t have known about either without this website which we’ve been perusal studiously for many months while planning our holiday so we are very grateful and indebted to John for sharing his knowledge. We are also staying Park Slope in Brooklyn partly due to the neighbourhood’s coverage on this website and are absolutely loving it so thanks due again to John.
Way to inform visitors to NYC that one can experience the city (not just Manhattan) for minimum $$$. Of course hotels prices are expensive but many places to visit such as parks are free. Many museums do not have a set entrance fee, it’s more like accepting donations. The SI Ferry is free, of course the NYC Ferry is $4.00. There are many great quality eateries that are budget priced (outside the high touristy areas). Many of those eateries featured on this website.
The Brooklyn Bridge is quite the impressive bridge for sure! The span was designed by John A. Roebling. The project’s chief engineer, his son Washington Roebling, contributed further design work, assisted by the latter’s wife, Emily Warren Roebling. When her husband was bedridden, it was up to her (who was the only one to visit him when he was sick) to see it through. She developed extensive knowledge thanks to his teachings. She took over much of the chief engineer duties, including day-to-day supervision and project management. When the bridge was finally completed in 1883, she was the first to cross it by carriage. She was honored in a speech by Abram Stevens Hewitt, who said that the bridge was, “an everlasting monument to the sacrificing devotion of a woman and of her capacity for that higher education from which she has been too long disbarred”.
Yes! I took the ferry the last time I was in the city and it was great. Tourists, just be careful whenever you’re approaching the piers, because there WILL be scammers nearby claiming to “sell” tickets. Once you get past those people, you’ll have a great time! It’s very relaxing to be out on the water and watch the city pass by.
I tried this 2 weeks ago on a sunny October day. I started at Wall St. and ended at Hunter’s Point and went back to Wall St. I called it my own self Bridges tour. It took one hour going out and one hour back. It was well worth it! I got wonderful photo and sat up on top. Such a good deal for a round trip ticket of $8.00.
Great article! I am planning to take my parents to NY this summer. I haven’t explored NY much but been there a couple of times but I am still new to commuting there and this article gives me an idea on how to get to DUMBO via the ferry and then walk through Brooklyn bridge. Thanks a lot for all the great infos!
I was in Chicago one summer house sitting and I had been many there multiple times but not usually in the summer. Anyway. I need to get from Shedd Aquarium back up towards Navy Pier I paid $5 to ride the ferry boat instead of walking 3 miles or taking a cab with would’ve been like $15 with tip. It was a nice boat ride with the lake breeze on a summer day and seeing the skyline during early evening
The staten island ferry and the circle line are good to use. Your ferries are a good choice. I’m not sure when they started. In the early 1990s, my coworker had me walk over the Brooklyn Bridge to go to a meeting in one of our buildings. In mid 1990s, I took tram for a ride. I lived in 2 boros of nyc years ago.
I love that you are showing this! My husband and I live not too far from the Clason Point pier in the BX on the Soundview ferry line. If someone takes Soundview…omg im at the part you boarded Soundview! Yay, Gracie! Soundview also takes you past North Brother Island which is not open to the public. It’s so hard to get to it, but you can see it while riding. This was great!
That Rockaway ferry is definitely useful for those who’d rather not take a ride on the A! Not a secret but a favorite of mine when it comes to ferries is the Staten Island Ferry, which is of course free and an absolute steal. The reason the ferry is free is because the fee for it was eliminated in 1997 by former Mayor Giuliani as part of the “One city, one fare” system the MTA started that year. So Staten Islanders wouldn’t be paying extra when they transfer to the subway at South Ferry. Another free ferry is NY Waterway’s IKEA ferry which goes between Midtown and IKEA in Red Hook with a stop at Wall Street in between. It’s great that Brooklyn has its own IKEA for those who don’t want to or can’t go to either Nassau County or New Jersey for IKEA. Even better that the ferry exists so you can chillax and stop for some meatballs. That bridge you went under at 2:41 is the Marine Parkway–Gil Hodges Memorial Bridge which opened in July 1937. It’s a vertical-lift bridge, meaning the bridge can be lifted in case a vessel wants to pass beneath. The bridge’s center span can be raised to a height of 150 feet or 46 meters to do so. It was built by the American Bridge Company (who also helped build the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge, Chrysler Building, and Empire State Building) cost 10 million dollars to build, or over 200 million dollars in 2024 dollars!
Great article Jon. Once again you find something new to bring to our attention. I had no idea about this and even though I live in England I will be taking a lot of bits from this article for future reference. Bargain price and you see things you haven’t seen before on the area. Ferry looked decent to. If anyone is new to Jon then you have come to the right website. The best no BS NYC YouTuber out there. Watch all his articles if you can.
Great article! I love the NYC ferry and have used it many times, including both the Rockaway and Soundview lines, during my after -work and day off excursions around NYC. The views can’t be beat, and even though the $4 fare used to be $2.75 ( upped to offset the massive subsidy from the city) it’s still a great deal.
Thank you for a great article.. the Robert f Kennedy bridge used to be called the Triboro bridge back when I was a kid. There are five bridges going up the Harlem river to the Hudson. One more bridge going northeast the City Island Causeway and the Marine parkway bridge from Brooklyn to Rockaway and the Cross Bay Bridge connects the peninsula to the rest of Queens. My family had a boat way back when I was a kid and went every where. These are are city bridge keeping the city connected
Thanks for this one Jon, I loved navigating the three rivers in NYC on an architecture boat tour, much more expensive but did have a great narration of the history of NY via the development of the built environment. When I come back I’ll definitely be doing this one, what a wonderful trip and so economical. Keep up the great work ❤
Great article Jon, I’ve always wondered why the ferry didn’t stop at Coney Island, that would be very convenient considering how convoluted the subway system is getting there. Also, seeing you pass Rikers Island maybe remember that it’s incredibly dumb that they don’t offer a ferry that runs back and forth from Manhattan to Laguardia
Saw your previous article about the ferry to Brooklyn from Pier 11 (never knew about this before) and used this route on a recent visit to NYC (from Scotland) with my daughter. Like you say, fantastic views of lower Manhattan and the Brooklyn Bridge for the fraction of the cost of a tour boat. Also made us feel like locals! Coupled with a walk around BB Park, some snacks at the Time Out Market and pizza for dinner at Juliana’s – what a great day!!
When we first got back to NY in 2006 I found most of my work on Wall Street. I finally found Mario’s. Great service, but being on the water from 92nd to Wall Street would have started my day with a big smile. Rode it a few times to 34th., but the walk to 42nd and Lex is rather grim. Took it out to Rockaway last year and it was great. I was even approached by a little pixie (so pretty) who suggested a restaurant and hotel. Married 31 years. I opted to walk the beach.
Thanks to these YouTube websites there are more tourist infested areas nowadays than used to be. I was a big fan of the NYC. What I liked was the authenticity that surrounded me in years 2007 – 2009. I was surrounded mostly by New Yorkers on Staten Island Ferry, NYC Ferry, Roosevelt Island Tramway, Bowling Green, Wall Street, Greenwich Village, Brooklyn Heights. My last visit in 2017 changed my feeling about NYC. What ruined my relation to the city were tourists everywhere. Thanks to YouTube, everybody knows now about the hidden germs that in the past, only locals and those who really studied the city new about.
I do the complete opposite. I walk the Brooklyn Bridge to the park and then take the ferry to pier 11/Wall Street, so I can walk to the WTC. Also, I took a ferry back in April to Ferry Point Park and it did go under the RFK and Hell Gate bridges. The only bridge I never been under (on a boat anyway) is the Verrazzano. I recently walked under it back in March for the first time in Bay Ridge. I think I’ll take that route to the Rockaways just to go under that bridge. It’s a beautiful bridge. Also, I like the Circle Line because it goes under the oldest bridge in Manhattan. The High Bridge. 😁