New York City is a multicultural hub with dozens of museums, hundreds of parks and millions of people. The number of potential things to see and do can feel overwhelming, but NY1 has you covered with some of the highlights taking place this weekend across the five boroughs.

NYC Restaurant Week

Offers available through Feb. 12
Across the city
More information here

The city’s biggest dining event is back, with deals available at restaurants across the city through Feb. 12.

Two-course lunches and three-course dinners are priced at $30, $45 and $60. Find a participating eatery here.

‘The Winter Show’

Open through Feb. 1
Park Avenue Armory, Manhattan
More information here

More than 70 booths at “The Winter Show” at the Park Avenue Armory feature 5,000 years of art, antiques and design. Everything from rugs, paintings, sculptures and suits of armor to illuminated books, lamps and hand-crafted game boards from the 19th- to mid-20th centuries are on display.

The show was founded in 1954 as a benefit for East Side House Settlement, a community-based organization once located on the Upper East Side, but moved in the 1960s and supports the Bronx and northern Manhattan.

(Spectrum News NY1/Roger Clark)

Urban Wildlife: Groundhogs

Feb. 1 from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. 
Fort Totten Park, Queens
More information here

Ahead of Groundhog Day on Monday, NYC Parks invites residents to learn more about the rodent species and the origins of the holiday.

An NYC Parks Urban Park Ranger will guide attendees on a walk to try and predict if the groundhog will see his shadow this year.

2/1 🌙 Discover if the groundhog will see his shadow this year on an educational walk: https://t.co/npc6RqHDoE

— NYC Parks (@NYCParks) January 29, 2026

100 Years of the Schomburg Center

Open through May 3
Schomburg Center, Manhattan
More information here

To celebrate 100 years as an institution dedicated to research in Black culture, the Schomburg Center in Harlem has 100 rare items on display celebrating the history of the African American diaspora.

A 1948 Brooklyn Dodgers baseball, signed by legends Jackie Robinson and Roy Campanella, and Malcolm X’s briefcase are just two of the gems available to see.

(Spectrum News NY1/Roger Clark)

‘Monet and Venice’

Open through Feb. 1, 2026
Brooklyn Museum
More information here

This is the last weekend to see “Monet and Venice” — New York’s largest museum show dedicated to impressionist painter Claude Monet in more than 25 years, according to the Brooklyn Museum.

Featuring more than 100 works of art, the museum says it’s the first exhibition to focus on Monet’s paintings of Venice. Curators say it’s an “underexplored chapter in the artist’s late career” after he once claimed the city was “too beautiful to be painted.”

’45 Years of Pac-Man’

Open through May 31
Paley Center for Media, Manhattan
More information here

The Paley Center for Media is celebrating 45 years of the iconic arcade character with two floors of Pac-Man memorabilia.

Visitors will see items dating back to his creation in Japan in 1980, including Pac-Man lunchboxes, mini-games and Pac-Man-inspired products like Oreos, Krispy Kreme donuts and ramen noodles. There will also be plenty of opportunities to play the game itself, according to the Paley Center.

‘Paper Jane: 250 Years of Austen’

Open through Feb. 14, 2026
The Grolier Club, Manhattan
More information here

An exhibition celebrating the 250th anniversary of the birth of Jane Austen, “Paper Jane: 250 Years of Austen” includes a “kaleidoscopic mix of 110 objects,” organized chronologically at 50-year intervals. 

The timeline moves from 1825 to 2025, and includes “rare first editions, manuscripts, popular reprintings, movie posters, illustrations and theater playbills,” among other items.

(Spectrum News NY1/Roger Clark)

‘The Future Was Then: The Changing Face of Fascist Italy’

Open through Feb. 26
The Poster House, Manhattan
More information here

An exhibition at The Poster House explores how the fascist government of Italy under Benito Mussolini influenced the art of the period.

The exhibit features 75 pieces that chronicle Mussolini’s regime, and focuses on “the often blurred line between propaganda and art.”

Bumper Cars at Bryant Park

Open through Feb. 28, 2026
Bryant Park, Manhattan
More information here

“Bumper Cars on Ice” is back at Bryant Park’s Winter Village.

The parks says the activity is for ages 7 and up, and recommends reserving a time slot in advance.

Holiday Train Show at Grand Central

Open through February 2026
Grand Central Terminal, Manhattan
More information here

Another train show for the holiday season, the New York Transit Museum at Grand Central’s offering is smaller than what’s on display at the New York Botanical Garden, but no tickets are required.

The exhibit features model trains running through a 34-foot-long display — departing from a miniature Grand Central and passing by other iconic New York City landmarks like the Brooklyn Bridge and the Empire State Building. The Transit Museum’s collection of model trains includes Metro-North, Polar Express and vintage subway train sets.

‘Urban Stomp’

Open through February 2026
Museum of the City of New York, Manhattan
More information here

An exhibit at the Museum of the City of New York, “Urban Stomp: Dreams & Defiance on the Dance Floor,” guides visitors through a rich history of social dances born, shaped or popularized in the city.

There are around 30 video tutorials teaching the steps of dance styles like the foxtrot, Lindy Hop, salsa, hip-hop, breaking, hustle and vogue, with related cultural artifacts on display.

Ice Skating in Manhattan

Open through March 2026
Rockefeller Center, Manhattan
Wollman Rink, Central Park
Rockefeller tickets here
Wollman tickets here

Ice skating is open for the season at The Rink at Rockefeller Center and at Wollman Rink in Central Park.

Rockefeller Center’s website calls skating on its rink of the city’s “quintessential winter activities.”

Skip the cabin fever. Take your family for a spin on The Rink at Rockefeller Center Presented by Chase Freedom. pic.twitter.com/CjDEpNSsCd

— Rockefeller Center (@rockcenternyc) February 28, 2025

MoMA Mart

Open through March 29
MoMA Design Store, Manhattan
More information here

A pop-up at the Museum of Modern Art’s Design Store is made to look like a grocery store — but nothing is edible. The products may look like croissants, tacos, mustard and milk, but they’re actually everything from lamps and candles to stools, bags and timers.

The exhibit is an exploration of food as form, with all items available for purchase.

‘FAREwell, MetroCard’

Now open
New York Transit Museum, Brooklyn
More information here

After more than three decades in use, the MetroCard is retiring. A new exhibit at the New York Transit Museum invites visitors to learn about its history, including its debut in 1994, the technology behind it and its lasting legacy.

At Chelsea Market in Manhattan, art made from MetroCards is hanging on the walls near the Ninth Avenue entrance, including framed creations of cats, the five boroughs and a school bus.

Street Food City

Open Thursdays to Sundays from noon to 6 p.m.
Museum of Food and Drink, Brooklyn
More information here

A new exhibit at the Museum of Food and Drink (MOFAD) in Brooklyn is dedicated to the city’s smallest food businesses and the immigrant entrepreneurs who have shaped the city’s flavor and culture.

Organizers say Street Food City “traces the challenges faced by street food entrepreneurs of the past to today’s fight for vendor rights.” The exhibit’s curator, Catherine Piccoli, and MOFAD president Nazli Parvizi also joined NY1 to discuss the exhibit.

Purchase tickets here.

‘Empire Skate of Mind’

Open daily until April 12, 2026
Brooklyn Children’s Museum
More information here

The Brooklyn Children’s Museum has transformed its rooftop terrace into a retro rink described by organizers as a nod to the Empire Roller Rink that lasted in Brooklyn from the 1940s until 2007.

Tickets are required for the all-ages celebration. Skates, helmets and wrist guards are provided.

Studio Museum in Harlem

Open daily 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.
144 West 125th St., Manhattan
More information here

The Studio Museum in Harlem has reopened after being closed for nearly eight years.

The museum, which is dedicated to presenting and collecting the work of Black artists, returns with a variety of exhibits on display.

(Spectrum News NY1/Roger Clark)

‘Impact: The End of the Age of Dinosaurs’

Now open
American Museum of Natural History, Manhattan
More information here

A new exhibit at the American Museum of Natural History looks at the impact of the asteroid strike that wiped out the dinosaurs 66 million years ago.

The exhibition also explores how the Earth recovered from the event, including how it paved the way for new species.

(Spectrum News NY1/Roger Clark)

‘Encounters in the Milky Way’

Now open
American Museum of Natural History, Manhattan
More information here

“Encounters in the Milky Way” is a new show at the Hayden Planetarium that gives visitors a “front-row seat to spectacular moments in our solar system’s past and future.”

Narrated by Pedro Pascal, the show takes viewers through the paths of stars, comets and other interstellar debris. It’s part of the Rose Center for Earth and Space’s celebration of 25 years since its opening.

🚀A new Hayden Planetarium Space Show, narrated by Pedro Pascal, is opening June 9! In Encounters in the Milky Way, you’ll get a front-row seat to spectacular moments in our solar system’s past and future, including the paths of stars, comets, interstellar debris, and more. pic.twitter.com/jZtZLeaHFq

— American Museum of Natural History (@AMNH) May 20, 2025