![]() |
Z in New York City?
So I am going to drive up to NYC with my girlfriend this Friday. We're going to spend the weekend in the city (staying in Manhattan) and we're trying to figure out which car to take.
The car is going to be valet parked. Where... I don't know. I pull up to the hotel and they take the car. I do know its expensive as hell, though! Options are the Z or her Benz (CLK 500). I kind of want to take the Z but not sure how it would fare. Thoughts and tips for visiting NYC? This will be the first time I've actually driven into the city. |
I wouldn't risk it If I was you. Might as well just take the CLK.
|
Quote:
|
take the CLK. too hard to see out of the Z in NYC traffic
|
CLK.. Plus I dont trust NYC valet parkers with a 6mt
|
Pretty sure we are going to take the Mercedes. We can fit more stuff in it anyways, although the Z gets better gas mileage!
|
Have you seen the stories of what valets do to guests cars! I would never trust them with my new car, if a older non sporty car then by all means.
:stirthepot: |
Quote:
|
I wanna say take the Z, but if ur gonna hangout mostly n Manhattan don't do it. If I have 2 parallel park in the city or park n a lot I don't drive my Z I drive my Benz. The only time I drive my Z 2 Manhattan is if I'm going 2 b near my car the whole time and I don't hafta worry about some idiot scraping my bumpers. The Z would be a lot of fun on the road trip but once u get 2 the city parking is gonna be a hassle.
|
For a visitor, a car is a liability in NYC, not a convenience. Parking around high traffic areas that you want to be is either nonexistent or incredibly expensive. So, you end up leaving it parked in the $30/day hotel lot and taking cabs/subway anyway. If you do venture out, you quickly realize why NYC has considered making cars coming into Manhattan prohibitively expensive for the uninitiated. There's too much traffic on the island.
You crawl along everywhere on the surface streets if you don't know alternate routes. The direct a-b way to your destination can take twice as long as backtracking 10 blocks and going around a back way. Typically, visitors think cabbies are trying to rip them off by doing this, when they are actually doing them a favor. I wouldn't want to try to cross a couple of lanes of 5th Avenue traffic in Midtown with the rearward veiw out of a Z, or navigate narrow streets of the Village, SoHo or TriBeCa. Above the 60s and around the park, you'd probably be alright, but there's not as much to see up there that isn't better traveled by foot anyway (museums, park and shopping) so you'd probably want to just park and, well, that's also the prime residential area so good luck finding anything. You might get lucky finding plentiful spaces to park above 110th street, in which case I'd highly recommend taking the Benz. Seriously, since you ask, take the train and enjoy the city without a car. New York is one of the few places in America where no car is actually preferable, in my opinion. |
Thanks for the tips.
We are only going to be driving into the city on Friday and driving out on Sunday. The hotel is going to take care of the car at a pretty ridiculous daily rate and we will take a cab or the subway everywhere else. |
Quote:
Weekends, starting with Friday night, are even worse than weekdays. Friday nights are when the "bridge and tunnel crowd" come in to do the nightclubs. (B&T is a derogatory term meaning people who can't or won't live in the City proper ... usually because they can't afford $3K+ for a Manhattan studio apartment as big as your Z.) But Sundays are just as bad, because everyone has to go back to their starting positions for the Monday morning rat race. And Sundays in-bound are especially bad for traffic coming up from the Jersey Shore. Think of a 140 mile-long traffic jam. I got caught in this last weekend and it took me 2 1/2 hours to drive 65 miles. (If I hadn't had the 7AT, I think I would have parked the car for 6 hours.) Your best bet is taking Amtrak from Washington, Philadelphia, or one of the stops nearer to NY like Iselin (Metropark). Don't go as far as Newark. Amtrak will get you in to 32nd Street and 8th Ave., which is walk-able to many hotels (or a good place to get your first taxi). |
Do you have any idea on when the best time to hit NYC would be? Check in is after 3PM.
I'm pretty sure we're driving. Don't want to spend the money on a train ticket and we might swing by Philadelphia. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Phila is a day trip by itself. (It has a small but good Chinatown, for instance.) BTW -- tolls and parking cost more than a RT ticket from Amtrak at Iselin NJ, to say nothing of the risk of something happening in NYC to one of your good cars. Parking tickets start at $70-150, and once a car has a ticket it can be towed at any time, for an extra $250 towing charge, plus possible damage from the tow trucks. (Don't say you weren't warned.) I think I can safely guarantee that if you drive in this time, your NEXT visit to NYC will be by train, bus or plane. :) |
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 06:14 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.6.0 PL2