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Bet You Didn’t Know These NYC Attractions Were Green

4/11/2018Updated 3/31/2025

New York City aims to eliminate its net greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, and you can see those sustainable-minded efforts throughout the five boroughs. Some of the City’s most popular sights showcase innovative efforts to protect the planet: there’s a park suspended above city streets; a sea of solar panels on a museum exterior; and a geothermal system that warms and cools historic St. Patrick’s Cathedral. To see these and other green attractions, view our gallery below; for more content on sustainable travel in the City, visit our Green NYC guide.

The High Line

Photo: Brittany Petronella

The High Line

The High Line is an abandoned elevated rail line transformed into a horticultural oasis. Opened in 2009 and expanded multiple times since, the park conjures a calming haven in the midst of metropolitan grit. The popular trail has created a habitat for birds and insects; it’s naturally cooling; and its greenery provides shade and oxygen for city dwellers.

A person tends to a vibrant rooftop garden filled with rows of green plants against a backdrop of tall city buildings. The sun is shining, creating a bright atmosphere. A greenhouse is visible to the left.

Courtesy, The Farm at Jacob K. Javits Convention Center

Jacob K. Javits Convention Center Green Roof

The Javits’ marvelous 6.75-acre green roof, completed in 2014, attracts wildlife, provides insulation that cuts the building’s energy use by 26 percent, and absorbs stormwater, preventing runoff that overwhelms storm drains. It also has a farm for crop growing and a number of beehives. Plus, it’s darn pretty to look at. Visitors can arrange a tour at javitscenter.com.

Aerial view of the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York. The arena features a distinctive brown, oval design with a green roof. Surrounding it are tall modern buildings under a clear blue sky.

Photo: BSE Group

Barclays Center Green Roof

Barclays Center has life above and beyond sporting events and concerts—literally. On top of the structure is a 3-acre green roof whose sedum plants flower in summer and that has environmental and noise-dampening benefits. A street-level green roof, also covered by sedum, slopes over the venue’s subway entrance.

A subway train travels on an elevated track in front of a skyline featuring modern skyscrapers under a clear blue sky. A large billboard sign is partially visible on the left.

7 Line. Photo: Daniel Harel

Mass Transit

Traveling the thousands of miles of NYC’s subway and bus routes is eminently low-impact; if city riders drove instead, they would create 15 million metric tons more emissions each year. The system is more than a century old and has faced major infrastructure challenges, but public officials are working to fix them. Meanwhile, the City continues to add zero-emission buses to its fleet and has greatly expanded its bike-share program since a launch in 2012.

Brooklyn Children’s Museum

Photo: Marley White

Brooklyn Children’s Museum

This museum’s 2008 building earned a Silver LEED certification for its eco-friendly features, which include solar-generated electrical power, recycled rubber flooring and geothermal heating and cooling. The venue also teaches kids about ecology through hands-on exhibits.

Bright, modern restaurant interior with wooden furniture and patterned tile accents. Tables are set with white napkins and glassware. Potted plants and decorative lights add warmth. Shelves in the background display wine bottles.

Rosemary's Midtown. Photo: Daniel Krieger

Green Restaurants

Restaurants like Family Meal at Blue Hill New York City and the Marshal (which also burns wood rather than gas and uses wind power for electricity) source from local farms, taking advantage of fresh produce and meats while avoiding the waste of shipping food long distances. Some spots, like Roberta’s, Rosemary’s and Bell Book & Candle, grow herbs and veggies on-site, and Brooklyn’s Rhodora Wine Bar strives to be zero waste, focusing on natural producers, tinned fish and a dedication to recycling and composting.

A cyclist wearing a patterned shirt rides across a bridge in the foreground. The background features a city skyline with tall buildings under a clear sky, and a waterway lined with trees and red brick structures.

Photo: Gabby Jones

Gowanus

The Gowanus Canal is the unlikely center of an environmentally friendly renaissance. Atop Whole Foods, powered by solar energy, a rooftop farm grows lettuce sold in-store. Nearby, Big Reuse stocks reclaimed architectural materials and furniture. The canal itself is embarking on a cleanup that will add public green space as well as storage tanks for sewage.

Battery Park City

Photo: Alex Lopez

Battery Park City

Horticulturalists manage the neighborhood’s parks without pesticides and follow rigorous low-impact practices. A large-scale composting operation generates fertilizer and “compost tea”—a special liquid fertilizer made by culturing liquid with compost—used to improve soil and ward off bugs. Think of it as probiotics for plants.

St. Patrick’s Cathedral

Photo: Christopher Postlewaite

St. Patrick’s Cathedral

St. Patrick’s Cathedral has a cutting-edge geothermal heating and cooling system, completed in February 2017, that trims the church’s carbon emissions by 94,000 kilograms annually. The underground temperatures of 10 wells, some drilled to a 2,200-foot depth, are used to cool and warm the building, sometimes simultaneously.

Sunflowers frame a rooftop garden with people walking around. In the background, a city skyline is visible under a blue sky with scattered clouds.

Photo: Christopher Postlewaite

Brooklyn Navy Yard

At Brooklyn Navy Yard, known for soundstages and studios, some 3,000 solar panels generate 1.1 million kilowatts of electricity. Brooklyn Grange, which helps develop rooftop farms, is based in the Navy Yard, as is the Naval Cemetery Landscape, part of the Brooklyn Greenway and a home for pollinators and rare birds.

Hotels

Courtesy, Grand Hyatt New York

Hotels

The City has asked buildings to cut greenhouse gas emissions 40 percent by 2030. Nineteen hotels—including the Hyatt Grand Central New York and The Peninsula—have signed on. Through upgrades like high-efficiency boilers and LED lighting, these venues are shrinking their carbon footprints.

Empire State Building

Photo: Julienne Schaer

Empire State Building

In 2009, the Empire State Building’s owners completed a green-minded retrofit of the iconic 1931 skyscraper. Improvements like highly insulated windows and a micro-targeted temperature control system have reduced energy use by more than a third since the renovation—a case study showing that an old classic can learn new, green tricks.

Roosevelt Island

Photo: Tagger Yancey IV

Roosevelt Island

The island has few cars, plenty of parks and a slew of cutting-edge green buildings. Cornell Tech’s in-progress campus includes the “net zero” Bloomberg Center and “The House,” the world’s largest LEED-Platinum passive house structure. Tour the campus, which has 2.5 acres of publicly accessible green space.

Vertical garden,interior

Courtesy, Greenery NYC

Vertical Green Walls

Tadao Ando’s magnificent building at 152 Elizabeth Street features a green wall that’s 55 feet high by 99 feet wide and changes color with the seasons. The Union Square location of makeup store Innisfree has a 1,820-square-foot vertical garden with nearly 10,000 plants. There’s also a large green wall at Pier 35 on the East River. Such installations improve air quality, cool temperatures and look great.

People are cycling on a paved path surrounded by grass and trees under a clear blue sky. Some wear backpacks, and one rides a go-kart. A few structures are visible in the background.

Photo: Paola Chapdelaine

Governors Island

Governors Island is an exemplar of adaptive reuse. Sustainability highlights include a teaching garden with vegetables, fruits and herbs; and a composting operation complete with “we’ll eat anything” goats. In 2021, for the first time ever, Governors Island remained open to the public year-round. There plans for it in 2029 to become the hub for the Center for Climate Solutions, a space for climate research, education and innovation.

A modern white building with multiple terraces and a sign reading "Whitney Museum of American Art" is seen against a clear sky. The foreground includes lush green trees and bushes, and surrounding city buildings are visible.

Photo: Max Touhey

Whitney Museum of American Art

The Whitney Museum's building has garnered kudos for its environmentally conscious architecture. It received LEED Gold certification for its energy-saving measures, green roof, recycled materials used in construction and public spaces that encourage community interaction. There are even two beehives on the roof.

Street view of a bustling theater district with multiple brightly lit marquee signs displaying show advertisements. Yellow taxis and pedestrians fill the busy street. Prominent signs include "Schoenfeld," "Jacobs," and "Booth" theaters.

Photo: Lucia Vazquez

Broadway Initiatives

Through efforts led by the Broadway Green Alliance, Wicked has switched to rechargeable batteries for microphone packs—saving more than well over 100,000 batteries since the change in 2008. In addition, the Gershwin Theater and other Broadway venues have begun using LED bulbs for their marquees; over 100,000 have been replaced, eliminating 800 tons of carbon emissions each year. Encore!

A modern urban scene with a wooden pedestrian bridge featuring a triangular pattern, stretching between high-rise buildings. Below, a bustling city street filled with cars. Lush greenery lines the path leading to the bridge.

Photo: Andrew Frasz

Hudson Yards

This development’s first completed building, 10 Hudson Yards, received LEED Platinum certification. Hudson Yards is also the first LEED Gold certified neighborhood in Manhattan. Residential structures use low-VOC paints and organic-waste collection for composting. The complex contains 14 acres of gardens and public spaces, rainwater-collection infrastructure to reuse 10 million gallons per year and an on-site, hyperefficient power plant. Its 5 acres of greenery are home to 200 trees, 28,000 plants and 225 species of pollinators like bees and butterflies.

Skyline of New York City featuring the One World Trade Center surrounded by other skyscrapers. The buildings are illuminated by the warm light of the setting sun, reflecting on the calm water in the foreground.

Photo: Julienne Schaer

NYC LEEDs the Way

NYC’s LEED buildings are models of sustainable urban architecture. Battery Park City’s The Visionaire has rooftop gardens, solar power and rainwater recycling, and the nearby Verdesian building was the first residential building to get a platinum LEED rating. One World Trade Center is one of the world’s tallest LEED-certified buildings. NYC’s green affordable housing includes the Bronx’s Arbor House (Platinum LEED), with a rooftop hydroponic farm.