A short walk on 41st Avenue away from the subway station—and the looming Citigroup Center—brings you to Vernon Avenue and the heart of Long Island City. Here, a smattering of modern restaurants and eclectic boutiques join local stalwarts in catering to the influx of middle-class professionals drawn by reasonable rents and the quick trip to midtown.
When I arrive, though, I’m pulled in by the sight of a smiling lady sweeping the threshold of colorful Astoria Florists, Ltd. (44-64 21st St at 44th Dr, Long Island City, Queens; 718-786-3062). Owner Tina Scarles points me west, recommending Water’s Edge (44th Dr at the East River; 718-482-0033, watersedgenyc.com). “It’s a beautiful spot,” she proudly declares. For 28 years, the romantic seafood restaurant has been the go-to place for marriage proposals, averaging four knee-drops a week; Billy Joel and Christie Brinkley had their wedding here—and you can’t blame the picturesque setting for their divorce.
Water’s Edge owner Marika Somerstein suggests well-known cultural institutions nearby—P.S.1, the Noguchi Museum and Socrates Sculpture Park—but the gallery “for avant-garde artists” in the crazily illustrated building next door is too intriguing to pass over. The first show to be featured at Deitch Studios (4-40 44th Dr at the riverfront, deitch.com), an outpost of Deitch Projects that opened in May, is an explosion of larger-than-life sculptures, neon-light installations and miscellany from Assume Vivid Astro Focus, a collaborative artists group. In conjunction with P.S.1’s Warm Up series, Deitch Studios is hosting simultaneous dance parties among its colorful works.
Gallery assistant Gabby Shaw is well acquainted with the ’hood’s best venues for alcohol and caffeine, and I bump into her again at her suggested spot, Communitea (47-02 Vernon Blvd at 47th Ave, 718-729-7708). Locally roasted coffee satisfies the denizens here, but the afternoon tea service—a decadent three-tiered mini meal of sandwiches, scones, pastries and tea for two—makes the café a destination for farther-flung biscuit eaters, and, of course, Gossip Girl fans.
“There are unexpected pleasures in LIC,” says Communitea owner Kafia Saxe. “Restaurants with backyard patios, a shop with Czech items, an Italian food market and a boutique featuring local artists.” To be sure, her recommendation for shopping, Subdivision Art (48-18 Vernon Blvd at 48th Ave; 718-482-1899, subdivisionart.com), features clothing from mostly New York–based designers, as well as a gallery of works by local artists.
Next stop: LIC Bar (45-58 Vernon Blvd at 45th Rd; 718-786-5400, longislandcitybar.com), an old-timey spot talked up by the florist, the gallery assistant, the barista and the native son of two restaurateurs. It reopened in 2002 after a 40-year break, and now locals, office workers and nearby Silvercup Studio crews line the original wood bar or drink out back on the patio. Come on Sunday afternoons for a neighborly BBQ with live music, hamburgers and hot dogs; on any other day, bartender Daniella Zabojova encourages patrons to order delivery from family-owned Italian restaurant Bella Via (47-46 Vernon Blvd at 47th Rd; 718-361-7510, bellaviarestaurant.com). “Best in America,” she says of the coal-fired brick-oven pizza. “And I’ll let you eat it here.”
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