Long Island is located on the Atlantic Ocean in southeastern New York State, east of New York City. Its famous Jones Beach State Park is a popular summer destination for the city folks and one of the best places to visit in the state. Long Island is home to sandy beaches, great restaurants, the historic late-1700s Montauk Lighthouse, fascinating Long Island Aquarium, and large parks such as Camp Hero State Park and Montauk Point State Park.

1.Old Westbury Gardens

Old Westbury Gardens

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Old Westbury Gardens is a beautiful Charles II-style mansion surrounded by 200 acres of magnificent formal gardens, woodlands, landscaped grounds, ponds, and lakes. The mansion was built in 1906 for John S. Phipps and his family and was designed by renowned English architect George A. Crawley. Westbury House is filled with fine original English antiques and art accumulated during the 50 years of its life as the Phipps’ family's residence. Westbury Gardens is open to visitors, and guides provide informative tours of the mansion and its formal gardens. It is also available for school visits, children's events and programs, family programs, classic car shows, museum exhibits, indoor and outdoor classical music concerts, lectures, pop concerts, and many other types of events.

Address: 71 Old Westbury Rd, Old Westbury, NY 11568, Phone: 516-333-0048

2. Vanderbilt Museum and Planetarium

Vanderbilt Museum and Planetarium

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The Vanderbilt Museum and Planetarium is located in the town of Centerport on the north shore of Long Island, on Eagle's Nest, the former 43-acre estate of William K. Vanderbilt II. The museum includes the Vanderbilt Mansion with all its furnishings and art, a marine museum with a collection of natural history specimens, a curator's cottage, a boathouse, gardens, a seaplane hangar, and an extensive collection of firearms, swords, ship models, and various objects from Europe, Asia, and Africa. The museum is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The museum curators offer a very popular guided tour while dressed in period costumes, bringing the lives of the estate’s previous residents to life. The planetarium operates a Konica Minolta Gemini Star III full dome display projector, one of the best in the country, and with the latest surround sound technology

Address: 180 Little Neck Road, Centerport, New York 11721, Phone: 631-854-5579

3.Planting Fields Arboretum State Historic Park

Planting Fields Arboretum State Historic Park

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Located in the Upper Brookville village in Oyster Bay, New York, the 400-acre Planting Fields Arboretum State Historic Park is located on the former estate of railroad executive William Robertson Coe and his wife. It includes their 67-room Tudor revival residence Coe Hall as well as gardens, woodland paths, greenhouses, extensive plant collections, and a herbarium with more than 10,000 pressed specimens. The park is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is open to the public, so visitors can enjoy strolling through rolling lawns, woodlands, and gardens. The Camellia Greenhouse has a large collection of camellias while the main greenhouse has impressive collections of orchids, hibiscus, succulents, and seasonal flowering plants. Guided tours of Coe Hall offer a glimpse into the lifestyle of the rich in the 1920s, with collections of furnishings, stained glass, paintings, and decorative arts.

Address: Planting Fields Rd. Oyster Bay, NY 11771, Phone: 516-922-9210

4.Long Island Aquarium and Exhibition Center

Long Island Aquarium and Exhibition Center

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Best known for one of the largest live coral reef displays in North America, Long Island Aquarium and Exhibition Center has a 120,000-gallon shark tank, sea lion shows, marmosets, African penguins, touch tanks where visitors can actually touch live animals, and over 100 diverse exhibits. There is also a colorful indoor garden, home of the Butterflies, Bugs and Birds Exhibit, with 30 species of North American and tropical butterflies that fly freely through the garden. It is the only bug display in New York. The bird aviary is home to conures, lovebirds, ringnecks, and many other bird species. One of the most exciting adventures in the aquarium is JAWsome Aquatic Adventures with the Shark Dive, which allows visitors to get into a cage and sink down to the Lost City of Atlantis Shark Exhibit. Visitors can also have a go at feeding the charming penguins at the Penguin Encounter.

Address: 431 E Main St, Riverhead, NY 11901-2556, Phone: 631-208-9200

5.MoMA PS1

MoMA PS1

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MoMA PS1 is one of the largest and oldest nonprofit contemporary art centers in the US. Founded in 1971, the museum serves as an exhibition space and does not have a permanent collection. Located in Long Island City, MoMA PS1 is also one of the biggest American art institutions focused completely on contemporary art and it supports and encourages most experimental and thought-provoking contemporary art of today. In addition to art exhibitions, the museum organizes the Warm Up summer music series, the Sunday Sessions performance series, and the Young Architects Program, organized together with the Museum of Modern Art.

Address: 22-25 Jackson Ave, Long Island City, NY 11101, Phone: 718-784-2084

6.Brooklyn Botanic Garden

Brooklyn Botanic Garden

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Brooklyn Botanic Garden is a 52-acre garden located in the Prospect Park neighborhood of Brooklyn, a delightful colorful oasis with more than 14,000 taxa of plants from all over the world. The garden is famous for its "gardens within the Garden" plant collections, unique groupings of plants and trees such as the famous cherry tree garden. When all 200 cherry trees are in bloom in the spring, the garden holds a month-long cherry festival at the Cherry Esplanade called Hanami, attracting thousands of visitors. The garden also houses the Steinhardt Conservatory with the C. V. Starr Bonsai Museum, a white glass and cast-iron aquatic plant house, three climate-themed plant pavilions, and an impressive art gallery. Another wonderful part of the garden is the Japanese Hill-and-Pond Garden created in 1914, the first Japanese garden in a public garden in the States. Discover more Brooklyn Attractions

Address: 990 Washington Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11225, Phone: 718-623-7200

7.Brooklyn Bridge

Brooklyn Bridge

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With its massive granite towers and long steel cables, the Brooklyn Bridge has been a New York City icon since 1883, stretching over the East River and connecting Manhattan and Brooklyn. The main span of the bridge is 1,595.5 feet long, and when it was completed, it was the first ever steel-wire suspension bridge in the world. Initially a bridge for pedestrians and non-motorized vehicles, today it offers safe passage to trains, bikes, and cars, with millions of commuters and tourists having crossed. It dominates the New York landscape and is one of the most recognizable features of the city skyline. Crossing the bridge on foot through the elevated walkway is one of the most memorable visitors’ experiences.

Address: Brooklyn Bridge, New York, NY 10038

8.Brooklyn Museum

Brooklyn Museum

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The Brooklyn Museum is the third largest art museum in New York City, with an impressive collection of over 1.5 million artworks. The museum is located near the Brooklyn neighborhoods of Crown Heights, Flatbush, and Prospect Heights, and covers 560,000 square feet of indoor and outdoor gallery space. Founded in 1895 and located in a beautiful beaux arts building designed by McKim, Mead and White, the museum was planned originally to be the biggest art museum in the world. The most significant museum collections are its Egyptian antiquities, spanning period of more than 3,000 years, as well as antiques from Europe, Africa Oceania, and Japan. There is a well-represented American art collection starting with the colonial period. Some of the most notable artists whose works are part of the collection are Mark Rothko, Norman Rockwell, Edward Hopper, Winslow Homer, Georgia O'Keeffe, and Max Weber.

Address: Brooklyn Museum, 200 Eastern Pkwy, Brooklyn, NY 11238, Phone: 718-638-5000, Instagram

9.Long Island Game Farm

Long Island Game Farm

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The Long Island Game Farm is a wildlife park and children’s zoo located in Manorville. The park has been in operation for 47 years and is Long Island’s largest children’s zoo and wildlife park. The zoo gives families the opportunity to learn about animals in their natural environment. The zoo features several encounter areas where visitors can interact with and feed animals including Bambiland and a nursery. If visitors would like to feed the animals, they must purchase food from the zoo as they are not permitted to bring their own food. However, the park features a snack bar serving a selection of food items and light fare. Additionally, the souvenir stand sells Long Island Game Farm merchandise and apparel.

Address: Long Island Game Farm , 489 Chapman Boulevard, Manorville, New York 11949, Phone: 631-878-6644

10.Coney Island

Coney Island

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Once an outer barrier island, Coney Island was eventually connected to Long Island by a landfill to form a peninsula on the Lower Bay in Brooklyn. This residential neighborhood of about 60,000 people morphs every summer into one of the most popular entertainment destinations in New York, bringing thousands of locals and visitors to enjoy the long sandy beach, Luna Park with its famous Cyclone roller coaster, and the Wonder Wheel. There is also the Circus Sideshow, the Mermaid Parade every June, a popular 4th July hot dog eating contest at Nathan’s, numerous street performers, musicians, food stalls, and much more. Coney Island is also the location of the MCU Park stadium, home to the Brooklyn Cyclones minor league baseball team and the New York Cosmos soccer club.

11. Cradle of Aviation Museum

Cradle of Aviation Museum

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Long Island’s Central Plains is the perfect place for the Cradle of Aviation Museum. Located in Garden City, near the Mitchel Air Force Base and Roosevelt Field, it commemorates Long Island's role in the history of aviation. With so many historic flights in the area by the mid-1920s, the area was nicknamed the "Cradle of Aviation.” The Cradle of Aviation Museum has more than 60 aircraft and models of airplanes from different time periods on display, such as Charles Lindbergh's Curtiss Jenny, the A-10 Thunderbolt II, the Grumman F-14 Tomcat, and even an actual never-used Apollo Lunar Module, LM-13, which was supposed to land on the moon with the cancelled Apollo 18 mission.

Address: Cradle of Aviation Museum, Charles Lindbergh Blvd, Garden City, NY 11530, Phone: 516-572-4111

12.Flushing Meadows-Corona Park

Flushing Meadows-Corona Park

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Flushing Meadows Corona Park, the largest park in Queens and the fourth largest in New York City, is popular for the range of facilities on offer for a number of sports, including baseball, soccer, cricket, tennis, and so much more. There is also a zoo as well as six playgrounds for the kids and the lovely Flushing Bay Promenade for a leisurely stroll. The park became famous in 1939, when it hosted New York World’s Fair, and its popularity further blossomed when it became the site of another World Fair in 1964. The park is a popular venue for weekend barbecues, fishing in Meadow Lake, skating in the winter, or catching a game of tennis at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center.

Address: Flushing Meadows-Corona Park, Flushing Bay, NY 11368, Phone: 718-760-6565

13.Jones Beach State Park

Jones Beach State Park

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Jones Beach State Park is the place where New Yorkers spend their hot summer weekends. With more than 6 miles of fine sand, families can find a nice spot to spend the day with the kids. There is always something to do in this fun park, which was designed by Robert Moses in the 1920s on the ocean liner theme. There is swimming and enjoying the sun, people watching, walking along the famous boardwalk, fishing, sampling the goodies in one of many diverse food concessions, and playing a game of mini-golf, shuffleboard, or basketball. The Jones Beach Theater offers concerts and plays, while the Jones Beach Nature Center teaches about the marine environment and endangered species that live nearby. Every summer, there are also special events, such as the Bethpage Air Show, volleyball and softball tournaments.

Address: Jones Beach State Park, Wantagh, NY 11793, Phone: 516-785-1600

14. Long Island Children's Museum

Long Island Children's Museum

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The Long Island Children's Museum is located in the former airplane hangar in Nassau Community College in Long Island’s Garden City. This popular kids’ venue has 14 interactive hands-on exhibits, a live theater, fun art spaces, and many planned daily activities that can keep kids of all ages busy and happy for hours. The two-story ClimbIt© structure has ramps going up and down in a spiral, using up some of that abundant energy. The kids will also love creating giant bubbles in the Bubble Gallery, making "rain" in the Our Backyard gallery, or playing all kinds of musical instruments. There is also a small theater with regular shows. The museum is one of the most popular venues for kids’ birthday parties in the city.

Address: Long Island Children's Museum, Nassau Community College, 11 Davis Ave, Garden City, NY 11530, Phone: 516-224-5800

15.Caumsett State Park

Caumsett State Park

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The Caumsett State Park Reserve is undeniably one of Long Island’s most treasured parks. Home to 1,5000 acres of mixed terrain and a number of historic buildings that were built during America’s Golden Age in the 1920s, Caumsett State Park holds a lot of gems to be discovered. The scenic peninsula of the park is the perfect place to traverse miles of trails and paths. Whether you’re walking, biking, hiking, or even cross-country skiing, the paths offer a multitude of uses as they wind through woodlands, rock shorelines, salt marshes, and meadows. Nature lovers can also enjoy looking out for the flora and fauna that call the park home, thanks to Caumsett’s diverse environment. For those who intend to visit, the park is open all year, every day of the week, from sunrise to sunset.

Address: Caumsett State Park, 25 Lloyd Harbor Road, Huntington, New York 11743, Phone: 631-423-1770

16. Lieb Cellars

Lieb Cellars

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Established in 1992, Lieb Cellars today includes 85 acres of vineyards, a crush winemaking facility named Premium Wine Group, and a pleasant tasting room located in a converted barn on the property. Lieb Cellars’ signature wine style is dry, clean, and fruit-forward. The star of their portfolio is the Reserve Pinot Blanc, made with grapes from 30-year-old vines. Their 2013 Reserve Pinot Blanc was declared a “Top 12 Wine in America” by renowned WSJWine from the Wall Street Journal. Lieb wines are produced entirely from the estate-grown fruit. Their vineyards are farmed sustainably and cared for by hand.

Address: Lieb Cellars, 13050 Oregon Rd, Cutchogue, NY 11935, Phone: 631-734-1100

17. Queens County Farm Museum

Queens County Farm Museum

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Located on New York City's largest remaining undisturbed farmland, Queens County Farm Museum has a history that dates to 1697. The 47-acre farm includes original farm buildings, a greenhouse, farm vehicles and tools, livestock, planting fields, an herb garden, and an orchard. Today still a working farm and a museum, Queens County Farm offers visitors a pleasant and tranquil respite from the hectic city life. It is especially popular during special events, such as wreath making workshops, auto and motorcycle shows, and the Queens County Fair, which is held every year. Kids enjoy visiting the farm animals and having hayrides.

Address: Queens County Farm Museum, 73-50 Little Neck Pkwy, Queens, NY 11004, Phone: 718-347-3276

18.Montauk Point State Park

Montauk Point State Park

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Montauk Point State Park is located in the hamlet of Montauk, and its 862 acres include most of the eastern tip of Long Island. When the sea is calm, it is possible to see the converging tides from the Block Island Sound and the Atlantic Ocean.

The park is covered in dense stands of trees, scrubland, and wetland ponds, which provide home to many species of birds and mammals. As you go down from the steep bluffs, the landscape changes to sandy and rocky beach. The park is world famous as the site for whale watching and launching deep sea fishing trips, since Long Island thrusts into the sea for more than 100 miles. The park is also home to the historic 1792 Montauk Point Light, one of the oldest in the country and the best place from which to see the entire park.

Address: East End of Route 27, Montauk, NY, Phone: 631-668-3781

19. Noguchi Museum

Noguchi Museum

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The Noguchi Museum was designed and built by Japanese-American artist Isamu Noguchi. The 24,000-square-foot two-story museum and its attached sculpture garden are located in Long Island City, a block from the Socrates Sculpture Park. It was renovated in 2004 and is now open all year round. In 1974, when he decided to build a museum, Noguchi bought a gas station and a photogravure plant located just across the street from his studio in New York, where he had lived and worked since 1961. The museum opened to the public in 1985 with the purpose to showcase and preserve Noguchi's sculptures, stage designs, architectural models, drawings, and furniture designs. It currently has 12 galleries and a gift shop.

Address: Noguchi Museum, 9 - 01 33rd Rd, Long Island City, NY 11106, Phone: 718-204-7088

20. Harmony Vineyards

Harmony Vineyards

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Harmony Vineyards is a sustainability-focused Long Island vineyard, striving to create world-class wines achieving harmony between humanity and nature. The vineyard's tasting room, which is located just three minutes via tax from the St. James LIRR Station, is housed within a National Register of Historic Places-listed waterfront home originally constructed in 1690 and renovated in 1904 by renowned New York City architect Archibald M. Brown. Visitors can taste the company's Bordeaux-style red wine blends and Chablis-style Chardonnays throughout the week, with exclusive farm-to-table waterfront Sunday brunches available with advance reservations. A curated selection of Long Island-brewed beers are also available.

Address: Harmony Vineyards, 169 Harbor Road, Head of the Harbor, NY 11780, Phone: 631-291-9900

21.Sagamore Hill

Sagamore Hill

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Located about 25 miles from Manhattan on the North Shore of Long Island, Sagamore Hill was the home of Theodore Roosevelt, 26th President of the United States, from 1885 until 1919. He called it his Summer White House and it was luxurious for its time, with 23 rooms and a bathroom with a then-rare porcelain tub. During the years he was the president, Roosevelt hosted many foreign dignitaries at Sagamore Hill. The house was the venue of the crucial peace talks that negotiated the end to the Russo-Japanese War. Roosevelt died at Sagamore Hill in 1919 and was buried at Youngs Memorial Cemetery nearby. Today, Sagamore Hill is a National Historic Site and includes the Theodore Roosevelt Museum.

Address: Sagamore Hill, 20 Sagamore Hill Rd, Oyster Bay, NY 11771-1807, Phone: 516-922-4788

22. The Heckscher Museum of Art

The Heckscher Museum of Art

© The Heckscher Museum of Art

Located in Heckscher Park in Huntington, New York, The Heckscher Museum of Artfeatures a collection that spans more than 500 years, with special focus on European and American art from the 19th to 21st centuries. The museum was established in 1920 by German-American industrialist August Heckscher with his gift of 185 artworks. His collection included Old Masters such as Lucas Cranach the Elder, Henry Raeburn, and François Girardon as well as renowned American painters such as Ralph Albert Blakelock, Thomas Moran, and George Inness. The museum collection grew to over 2,500 pieces of art. The museum is also a venue for a range of public programs for families, adults, and children, concerts such as the First Friday series, festivals, and workshops.

Address: 2 Prime Ave, Huntington, NY 11743, Phone: 631-351-3250

23.White Post Farm

White Post Farm

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White Post Farm has been a working family farm in Huntington, New York, since 1886. Starting with vegetables for the local market, White Post Farm evolved with the times and is today not only a working farm but also a popular agro-tourism destination for city dwellers who love to visit farm animals and pick up some fresh produce or a home-made pie. The farm has two huge bird aviaries with colorful parakeets, budgies, cockatiels, lorikeets, and love birds. There are also pony rides, bouncers, train rides, playgrounds, and much more. Kids can feed a baby giraffe, see antelopes and zebras up close, feed the sheep and goats, play in a giant sand box, and much more. The farm is a very popular place for kids’ birthday parties.

Address: 250 Old Country Rd, Melville, NY 11747, Phone: 631-351-9373