Grand Central Station Terminal in Lower Midtown. 42nd Street and Park Avenue. Phone 212-340-2583. (Free sightseeing Wed-Fri 12:30 pm). For this hall daily spend half a million people and is one of the sets common in films shot in the city. The vaulted ceiling is painted in green decorated with zodiac signs painted upside down by the Frenchman Paul Helleu. The station also has all kinds of shops and restaurants of both label and snacks. It is also, The Grand Central Station, with its impressive size, the train station with the largest number of platforms in the world, 44 to be exact. Grand Central Station Terminal in Lower Midtown. 42nd Street and Park Avenue. Phone 212-340-2583. (Free sightseeing Wed-Fri 12:30 pm). Symbol of the City of New York, also called Grand Central to dry building was completed in 1913 and still today is the largest station in the world in number of platforms, 44 with 67 tracks, 41 on the upper level and 26 in the bottom. It was built in the Beaux Arts style, and stands above the main lobby with its high vaulted ceiling and three huge windows 23 feet high. For this hall daily spend half a million people and is one of the sets common in films shot in the city. The station also has all kinds of shops and restaurants of both label and snacks. Cipriani Dolci in Grand Central Terminal. 89 East 42nd Street and Park Avenue. Phone 212-973-9666. (Mon-Sun 11am-12am). This Italian restaurant located on the grand staircase in the lobby of Grand Central Station, offers a delicious menu based on typical Venetian food, with a view. Ideal for business lunches, eating here can go between $ 40US and $ 80US. Grand Central Station Terminal in Lower Midtown. 42nd Street and Park Avenue. Phone 212-340-2583. (Free sightseeing Wed-Fri 12:30 pm). Symbol of the City of New York, also called Grand Central to dry building was completed in 1913 and still today is the largest station in the world in number of platforms, 44 with 67 tracks, 41 on the upper level and 26 in the bottom. The station also has all kinds of shops and restaurants of both label and snacks. The lobby of the Grand Central Terminal is one of the places to get good snapshots. If we do not have a tripod, there is a ledge to support the camera on the opposite side to the restaurant Cipriani Dolci, climbing the grand staircase, where we can try to capture the movement of coming and going of people. The Chrysler Building is lit up at night from the Empire State Building if you have a merdio-long telephoto lens is a good place to photograph.