Thursday, July 16, 2026

Governor Hochul Provides an Update on Air Quality From Canadian Wildfires


Governor Hochul: “All of New York is going to see and smell smoke today and tomorrow. There'll be times when it reaches the purple — a very unhealthy range. And as I said, please be smart about this. The forecasted smoke will be worse in Western New York, Central New York, Southern Tier, Mohawk Valley, Hudson Valley, New York City, and Long Island. There's not a whole lot that's out of that category. That's pretty much statewide.”

Hochul: “If you're experiencing shortness of breath or chest pains in yourself or someone else, seek immediate attention. If this is from the heat and you can't escape it, I would encourage people to go — don't just go home and go to bed. Go to a doctor, go to a hospital, because your life could be on the line. This is very dangerous, and to stay safe, we want you to monitor the real-time air quality index at AirNow.gov."

 Yes, we're in a very serious health situation right now in the State of New York. The smoke from the Canadian wildfires that covered the state yesterday, they're going to continue blanketing the state all day today. This is bad news for every New Yorker. There'll be great impacts, and I'm going to say many places in the state will be considered very unhealthy to be outdoors.

Let me repeat, very unhealthy to be exposed to this temperature, not just for sensitive groups. And the greatest impacts will be in the western and southern part of our state, and we're all going to see and smell smoke. It looks fine here in Albany right now, but it's going to change, and I want to explain this. We talked about our history with this. I remember back in 2023 when we had the wildfires up in Quebec, asthma-related emergency department visits increased by 82 percent, so we're expecting a spike. We're talking to the hospital emergency rooms about preparedness for this. We're also — want to make sure people know the signs.

If you're experiencing shortness of breath or chest pains in yourself or someone else, seek immediate attention. If this is from the heat and you can't escape it, I would encourage people to go — don't just go home and go to bed — go to a doctor, go to a hospital, because your life could be on the line. This is very dangerous, and to stay safe, we want you to monitor the real-time air quality index at AirNow.gov. Many people have it on their phone as well.

And as I'm going to say this over and over between now and tomorrow, if there's any way you can possibly stay indoors, please do not venture out.Shorter dog walking. Please keep the babies inside. Senior citizens, just hold on and stay home for another day and a half. Exercise is really not a smart thing to be doing when this is — this smoke is going to fill your lungs. It's very dangerous, and people with heart or breathing problems, older adults, children, teens, pregnant women, pretty much everybody. And if people who work outdoors, and we're, creating some flexibility here with our state workforce, we encourage the employers to make sure that if your employees do not have to be outdoors just today and tomorrow, let's get through this, let's be smart. We encourage you to let them stay indoors.

And if you have to go out, bring out a mask. Find a good fitting mask and make sure not to overexert yourself. And also all the summer camps that are out there, and the day schools and the childcare providers, asking them to be very vigilant about suspending outdoor activities. This is not a time to take all the little kids to the park. And also, check on your loved ones and neighbors. And if it's not good for us, the air's not quality, it's not good for an individual, it's not good for your pets either. So they — don't let them breathe in the same air. We're also expecting some relief this weekend, so stay informed over the next few days.

Real-time weather and emergency alerts you can find out more by texting 333111. And I will tell you what we're seeing. All of New York is going to see and smell smoke today and tomorrow. There'll be times when it reaches the purple — a very unhealthy range. And as I said, please be smart about this. The forecasted smoke will be worse in Western New York, Central New York, Southern Tier, Mohawk Valley, Hudson Valley, New York City and Long Island. There's not a whole lot that's out of that category. That's pretty much statewide. And it'll be unhealthy in the Capital Region, North Country, Finger Lakes, and unhealthy for sensitive groups.

So I don't know if that really matters. This is a day, just stay indoors. Just stay indoors, be smart about this, be vigilant. And so what we're doing to help, we're making N95 masks available across the state to any county that requested them. In New York City, MTA and Port Authority has made masks available to commuters at Penn Station, Grand Central, Times Square, Jamaica and the Port Authority Bus Terminal.

Our National Guard is involved. They're stationed across the five boroughs to help distribute masks as well. Upstate, we'll have staff at rest areas along the thruway with masks for New Yorkers as well. Any other ideas, we're open to them. We want to make sure that, number one, be smart — being smart means staying indoors. If you have to be outdoors or you're one of the sensitive groups please take advantage of our mask distributions or contact us, and we'll make sure you get it. Let's be smart, New Yorkers.

 

Mayor Mamdani Expands Next Mile NYC, Connecting New Yorkers on Probation to Careers in the High-Paying Trucking Industry

 

Mamdani administration expands commercial driver’s license training and career support to thousands of New Yorkers under community supervision  

   

Program advances public safety, reduces recidivism and strengthens New York City’s economy by investing in opportunity instead of incarceration  

  

Next Mile NYC has connected nearly 200 justice-involved New Yorkers to full-time job offers with starting salaries exceeding $70,000  


Mayor Zohran Kwame Mamdani, Mayor’s Office of Criminal Justice (MOCJ) Director Deanna Logan and Department of Probation (DOP) Commissioner Sharun Goodwin today announced the expansion of the City’s successful Next Mile NYC Commercial Driver’s License (CDL) training program to eligible New Yorkers on probation.  

   

The expansion creates a direct pathway from community supervision to stable, family-sustaining careers in the commercial trucking industry. The new partnership extends Next Mile NYC to more than 11,000 New Yorkers currently under DOP supervision across the five boroughs, building on the program’s success serving justice-involved New Yorkers in the community and its March 2026 expansion to people in custody on Rikers Island.  

  

“Public safety is built by creating the conditions that allow people to establish stable lives,” said Mayor Mamdani. "Expanding Next Mile NYC means thousands more New Yorkers on probation will have access to good-paying jobs, a pathway to long-term stability and the chance to provide for their families. When we invest in opportunity, we reduce recidivism, strengthen our economy and make our city safer for all.”  

  

“Next Mile NYC is how our city invests in gainful careers that support public safety,” said Deanna Logan, Director of the Mayor’s Office of Criminal Justice. “By expanding this program to New Yorkers under community supervision, we are creating more pathways to financial stability, while removing a significant barrier from individuals returning to their community.”  

   

“Expanding Next Mile NYC ensures more New Yorkers have the chance to gain valuable skills, secure stable employment, and successfully reintegrate into their communities. That is how we build safer neighborhoods and stronger futures,” said Sharun Goodwin, Commissioner of the NYC Department of Probation. “Every person deserves the opportunity to write a new chapter. At the Department of Probation, we see the potential in the people we serve every day, and we know that access to meaningful employment can change the trajectory of a life.”  

   

Through workforce development organization Emerge Career, participants complete a 40-hour online CDL training course, earn their Commercial Learner’s Permits (CLPs), receive behind-the-wheel instruction and take the New York State CDL road test. Graduates also receive job placement support connecting them with employers offering salaries ranging from $70,000 to $125,000.

 

Since launching in 2025, Next Mile NYC has delivered measurable, life-changing results:  

  •    306 participants have earned CLPs and 187 have obtained CDLs.  
  •   111 participants have secured full-time employment, earning an average salary of $73,573 and a median salary of $75,000. Another 74 graduates have pending job offers.  
  •    Zero participants have reported being rearrested.   
  •   94% of participants who completed behind-the-wheel training earned a CDL.  
  •   97% of participants who earned a CDL received a job offer within six months.  

   

The expansion reflects Mayor Mamdani’s commitment to creating economic opportunity for justice-involved New Yorkers while meeting the City's workforce needs. Reaching people while they are on probation gives them access to stable employment at a critical moment, helping them successfully complete community supervision, support their families and avoid future involvement with the criminal legal system.    

  

In March 2026, the Mayor announced the expansion of Next Mile NYC in partnership with the Department of Correction, allowing eligible people on Rikers Island to begin online coursework while in custody before transitioning to behind-the-wheel instruction, licensing and job placement after release. Since that expansion, 66 people have enrolled in the program and 22 have successfully completed the online training.  

   

“We are thrilled to expand our existing partnership with MOCJ and DOC to bring real, tangible second chances — rooted in careers, not just credentials — to New Yorkers on probation,” said Zo Orchingwa, Co-founder and Co-CEO of Emerge Career. “Our vision is to harness technology to open pathways to skilled trades careers that begin before release, not just after. This isn't a checkbox initiative or training that leads nowhere. Next Mile NYC is a real jobs and reentry program, built to change lives and deliver outcomes.”  

  

Formerly incarcerated people face persistently high unemployment, while industries such as trucking continue to significant workforce shortages. At the same time, research shows that access to stable employment is one of the strongest predictors of successful reentry and reduced recidivism.  

  

By connecting New Yorkers to careers that provide immediate, family-sustaining wages, Next Mile NYC is helping break the cycle of incarceration, strengthening the city’s workforce and making neighborhoods safer.   


NYS Office of the Comptroller DiNapoli: NYC Hotel Industry Among Nation's Largest, Strongest

 

Office of the New York State Comptroller News

Demand for NYC Hotels Leads U.S., But International Visitors Still Lagging and Employment Remains Below Pre-Pandemic Levels

New York City’s hotel industry is one of the nation’s strongest, with high demand for rooms led by a surge in domestic visitors, but it remains vulnerable to changes in tourism and the continued loss of international travelers due to geopolitical instability, according to a new report by State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli.

“The city’s hotel industry has largely recovered from the pandemic. It is doing well, but it could be doing even better if international visitors returned more quickly,” DiNapoli said. “Federal policies on trade and immigration, and other domestic and global geopolitical issues, are keeping some tourists away. Despite the challenges, we expect the sector to continue to grow, but a complete recovery requires a return of international visitors and increased employment to keep up with demand.”

“This report from State Comptroller DiNapoli underscores the critical role New York City's hotel industry plays in our economy, and how its recovery post-pandemic continues to set a gold standard for businesses and workers alike,” said Rich Maroko, President of the Hotel & Gaming Trades Council. “Our hotels welcome millions of visitors, generate billions in tax revenue, and support the highest salaries nationwide for workers. With tourism continuing to grow and more new hotels on the horizon than anywhere else in the country, we look forward to building on this momentum by creating more good paying jobs and ensuring the industry's continued success benefits the workers who make it possible."

“The Comptroller’s report confirms what the hotel industry has been saying for years: we have yet to recover from the pandemic, and we are still thousands of jobs and millions of visitors below where we were,” said Vijay Dandapani, President & CEO of the Hotel Association of New York City. “As an industry we are also paying our employees the highest wages in the country and contributing more than ever to the tax base, but our operating margins are much thinner, putting hotels at risk of closure—and putting more jobs at risk as well."

New York City welcomed 65 million visitors in 2025. The vast majority, 52.4 million or 81%, were domestic travelers, which was close to full recovery of pre-pandemic numbers. International visitors (12.5 million) in 2025 were at 92.6% of their pre-pandemic numbers, however, and actually down from 2024. Business travel to the city has also recovered less quickly and was at 92.6% of its 2019 level.

Supply Up to Meet Demand
New York State has the fourth most hotel rooms (245,291) after California (571,794), Texas (531,721) and Florida (498,655), with more than half in the city. The city’s hotel industry has met the strong demand from domestic leisure visitors, with the number of rooms increasing 16.7% from 2014 to 2024, more than national growth of 13.6%. The addition of 4,852 new hotel rooms expected this year would lead the nation in hotel construction for the second consecutive year. Those rooms are part of the 24 hotel projects with 5,778 rooms slated to open in the city through 2028. 

Among the boroughs, The Bronx saw the greatest percentage increase in hotels (67.7%) going from 31 in 2019 to 52 in 2025. Brooklyn was second, having added 32 hotels over the period to reach 147, an increase of 27.8%. Queens added 37 new hotels, a 23.1% increase.

Employment Lags
Employment in hotels has recovered more slowly than guests. There were 45,325 men and women working in hotels in 2025, 12.9% fewer than in 2019. Most of that lag is in Manhattan, the city’s largest hotel market. In 2019, it accounted for 45,594 employees or 87.6% of the total number of hotel workers. For the industry to fully recover, Manhattan has to restore the jobs it lost, DiNapoli’s report concludes.

The average hotel  employee salary, citywide, was $86,588 in 2025, up 24.8% from $69,371 in 2019. The citywide average wage is nearly double the national average of $45,681, but wages in city hotels vary widely by borough. Manhattan hotels paid an average salary of $91,879 last year, significantly more than Queens ($63,370), Brooklyn ($60,259), The Bronx ($37,932), or Staten Island ($31,942).

In May, the Hotel & Gaming Trades Council, AFL-CIO, the union representing 27,000 hotel workers in the city, reached an eight-year contract with the Hotel Association of New York City, which represents close to 250 hotels, that includes increased benefits and 50% wage increase over the life of the contract.

Other findings from DiNapoli’s report:

  • NYC hotels’ occupancy rate was 84.1% in 2025, the highest in the nation for the third consecutive year, but still below the 87.5% occupancy rate in 2019.
  • $333.71 was the average room rate 2025, up 4.7% from 2024 and 17.1% more than a room cost 2019, but lower than the pre-pandemic rate when adjusted for inflation.
  • 80.9% of hotel workers live in the city, with 46% in Brooklyn and Queens.
  • 63% of hotel workers were born outside the U.S., the largest share of foreign-born workers in any city industry, with construction second at 60%.
  • Room attendants account for the largest occupation in the city’s hotel industry with 29.2% of the workforce and an average salary of $49,887.
  • City visitors spent $55.6 billion in 2025, with hotels accounting for $13.9 billion (around 25%) of their spending, up from $11.9 billion in 2019.
  • The city collected $2.4 billion in tax revenue from the industry, including $770 million from the hotel occupancy tax, in Fiscal Year 2025.

Report

Related Work

Welcome Back to New York: An Analysis of Post-Pandemic Travel (July 2024)

The Tourism Industry in New York City (April 2021)

DiNapoli’s Tourism Sector Dashboard

Mayor Mamdani Releases “Rental Ripoff Report,” Outlining New Actions to Crack Down on Hazardous Housing Violations and Deceptive Landlord Practices

 

Administration will require disclosure of AI-altered rental listings, recognize tenant unions and strengthen enforcement against negligent landlords and conditions like mold and pests  

  

Plan includes 23 policy changes to target “repeat-offender” landlords, modernize housing code enforcement, improve oversight of fees and utility charges and better protect tenants 


Today, Mayor Zohran Kwame Mamdani released the Rental Ripoff Report, a package of 23 policy actions shaped by testimony from thousands of New Yorkers at Rental Ripoff Hearings held across the five boroughs. The hearings were established through one of the Mayor’s first Executive Orders and informed a sweeping set of reforms to strengthen tenant protections, improve housing quality and hold negligent landlords accountable.   

  

The actions build on the Mayor’s housing plan, Block by Block, which charts a path to build 200,000 affordable homes, preserve another 200,000, make the largest investment in public housing in modern history and enforce the nation’s strongest tenant protections.  

  

The report’s recommendations include recognizing tenant unions, expanding tenants’ ability to organize and bargain collectively over building conditions and other shared concerns; requiring landlords to disclose when rental listings have been altered using artificial intelligence or other digital tools; modernizing building owner registration and communication systems; and using the City’s full enforcement authority to crack down on “repeat-offender” landlords through inspections, enforcement programs and litigation.  

  

“At Rental Ripoff Hearings across the five boroughs, we heard from thousands of New Yorkers living with mold that was never treated, pests that were never addressed and fees that were never explained. Listening was only the first step. This report turns those stories into concrete action. From requiring disclosure of AI-altered listings to bringing our code enforcement systems into the 21st century and finally recognizing tenant unions, we are making it clear that every New Yorker deserves a safe home – and every landlord who refuses to provide one will be held accountable,” said Mayor Mamdani 

  

“The actions laid out in the Rental Ripoff Report will help create a city where every New Yorker can live with dignity. From improving code enforcement to supporting tenants who organize with their neighbors, these policies are rooted in real experiences and address real concerns. My thanks to the thousands of New Yorkers who helped shape these actions and to the many City staff who helped make the Rental Ripoff Hearings a success,” said Leila Bozorg, Deputy Mayor for Housing and Planning.

 

“The Rental Ripoff Hearings and today's report are writing a new chapter in tenant power in New York City. Governing is a partnership. By bringing tenants’ voices directly into policy and taking unprecedented steps to facilitate tenant organizing across the city, we are showing what governing with New Yorkers looks like. From legally recognizing tenant unions to coordinating enforcement days with tenants and owners, we are making clear that our city and our housing market is stronger when tenants are mobilized, engaged and represented,” said Cea Weaver, Director, Mayor’s Office to Protect Tenants 

  

Mayor Mamdani established the Rental Ripoff Hearings through Executive Order 8, signed during his first week in office. Between February and April, the administration held one hearing in each borough and accepted testimony online, engaging over 2,400 New Yorkers.   

  

The report identifies the most common concerns raised by tenants. 16% of testimony referenced pests, while 13% mentioned mold and another 13% cited leaks. New Yorkers also described widespread problems with poor housing conditions, landlord harassment, confusing interactions with agencies, deceptive fees and surprise utility bills. That feedback directly informed the policies included in the Rental Ripoff Report.  

  

The Mamdani administration will use every tool at the City’s disposal to implement the report’s recommendations, including executive action, agency rulemaking, legislation and litigation.   

  

Examples of executive actions and agency rulemaking include:   

  • Investigating every heat complaint individually rather than consolidating complaints from the same building.  
  • Allowing tenants to schedule certain building inspections.  
  • Improving response time to elevator outage complaints.  
  • Addressing the root causes of residential fires.  
  • Streamlining public information about tenants’ rights and strengthening protections against harassment based on immigration status.  

  

The Mayor’s Office to Protect Tenants will also convene a Legislative Task Force to recommend reforms to the City’s housing quality enforcement system. Possible reforms to be studied include:   

  • Adding financial penalties to the Underlying Conditions Program for landlords who fail to remediate mold.  
  • Strengthening the Alternative Enforcement Program (AEP) to better address chronic building violations.  
  • Modernizing the property registration process, which remains paper-based and does not require building owners to provide an email address.  
  • Allowing the Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD) to serve building owners with violations through digital notice to existing methods.   

  

I'm grateful for the two thousand New Yorkers who took the time to attend these hearings and to tell us what they need. That feedback now serves as our call to action and the reforms laid out in this report will significantly advance HPD’s mission to ensure that New Yorkers are safe and secure inside their homes,” said HPD Commissioner Dina Levy 

  

“This administration has done more than any other to better understand the lived experiences of renters and working New Yorkers facing the brunt of this city's housing affordability crisis,” said Department of Buildings Commissioner Ahmed Tigani. “Informed by hundreds of hours of testimony from our fellow New Yorkers at these Rental Ripoff hearings, this report now gives us the blueprint we need to repair what's broken in our enforcement protocols and close the gaps in city regulations. The Department of Buildings provides critical services protecting tenants against bad landlords, and supporting the responsible property owners who properly maintain their buildings. We look forward to enacting these reforms to make these services work better for our fellow New Yorkers.”   

  

“Every New Yorker deserves a safe and stable place to call home, without having to navigate deceptive practices or pay onerous or surprise fees just to keep a roof over their head. The Rental Ripoff Report reflects what thousands of New Yorkers told us directly: the system is broken,” said Department of Consumer and Worker Protection (DCWP) Commissioner Samuel A.A. Levine. “From enforcing the FARE Act, which protects renters from being forced to pay a broker fee when a landlord hired the broker, to the policies outlined in this report, we are building a fairer housing marketplace where tenants have greater transparency and stronger protections. At DCWP, we will continue using every tool available to deliver economic relief to all New Yorkers.”    


STATEWIDE AIR QUALITY HEALTH ADVISORY UPDATED

 

Logo

Updated Advisory In Effect for Thursday, July 16, 2026

New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) Commissioner Amanda Lefton and State Department of Health (DOH) Commissioner Dr. James McDonald issued an updated Air Quality Health Advisory for fine particulate matter for Thursday, July 16, 2026, due to the statewide impact of smoke from wildfires in Canada. New Yorkers may see visible smoke and hazy skies across the state and spikes in smoke-related pollution.  

The updated advisory is as follows:

  • The Long Island, New York City Metro, and Lower Hudson Valley regions are forecast to reach Unhealthy.
  • The Upper Hudson Valley, and Adirondack regions are forecast to reach Unhealthy for Sensitive Groups.
  • The Eastern Lake Ontario, Central New York and Western New York regions are forecast to reach Very Unhealthy. 

The pollutant of concern is: Fine Particulate Matter 

The advisory will be in effect: 10 a.m. until 11:59 p.m.   

The Air Quality Health Advisory regions consist of: Long Island which includes Nassau and Suffolk counties; New York City Metro which includes New York City, Rockland, and Westchester counties; Lower Hudson Valley which includes Dutchess, Orange, Putnam, Ulster, and Sullivan counties; Upper Hudson Valley which includes Albany, Columbia, Fulton, Greene, Montgomery, Rensselaer, Saratoga, Schenectady, Schoharie, and Washington counties; Adirondacks which includes Clinton, Essex, Franklin, Hamilton, northern Herkimer, Lewis, St. Lawrence, and Warren counties; Eastern Lake Ontario which includes northern Cayuga, Jefferson, Monroe, Oswego, and Wayne counties; Central New York which includes Allegany, Broome, southern Cayuga, Chemung, Chenango, Cortland, Delaware, southern Herkimer, Livingston, Madison, Onondaga, Oneida, Ontario, Otsego, Tioga, Tompkins, Schuyler, Seneca, Steuben, and Yates counties; and Western New York which includes Cattaraugus, Chautauqua, Erie, Genesee, Niagara, Orleans, and Wyoming counties. 

DEC and DOH issue Air Quality Health Advisories when DEC meteorologists predict levels of pollution, either ozone or fine particulate matter (PM2.5), are expected to exceed an Air Quality Index (AQI) value of 100. The AQI was created as an easy way to correlate levels of different pollutants to one scale, with a higher AQI value indicating a greater health concern. 

Fine Particulate Matter
Fine particulate matter (PM) consists of tiny solid particles or liquid droplets in the air that are 2.5 microns or less in diameter. PM 2.5 can be made of many different types of particles and often come from processes that involve combustion (e.g., vehicle exhaust, power plants, and fires) and from chemical reactions in the atmosphere. 

Exposure can cause short-term health effects, such as irritation to the eyes, nose, and throat, coughing, sneezing, runny nose, and shortness of breath. Exposure to elevated levels of fine particulate matter can also worsen medical conditions such as heart disease and asthma. People with heart or breathing problems, older adults, children and teens, pregnant people, and those who exercise or work outdoors may be particularly sensitive to PM 2.5. 

When outdoor levels are elevated, going indoors may reduce exposure. If there are significant indoor sources of PM 2.5 (tobacco, candle or incense smoke, or fumes from cooking) levels inside may not be lower than outside. Some ways to reduce exposure are to minimize outdoor and indoor sources and avoid strenuous activities in areas where fine particle concentrations are high. 

Additional information on PM 2.5 is available on DEC's website and on DOH's website (PM 2.5). A DEC fact sheet about the Air Quality Index is available on DEC’s website or by PDF download.   

To stay up-to-date with announcements from DEC, sign up to receive Air Quality Alerts through DEC Delivers: DEC's Premier Email Service. A toll-free Air Quality Hotline (1-800-535-1345) was also established by DEC to keep New Yorkers informed of the latest air quality situation. 

Wave Hill Weekly Events (Jul 16 – Jul 25) | Bookmark Your Next Summer Adventure!

 

Cherish those summer nights with an evening in the gardens as the sun glitters over the Hudson and washes over the Palisades in a tangerine dream. Whether you're unwinding with live music during Sunset Wednesdays, taking advantage of extended hours on Summer Fridays to find night-time critters, or discovering something new through the arts, Wave Hill is the perfect place to embrace the season, and find time for yourself and your loved ones. 


Sunset Wednesdays 2026

Named by Time Out as one of the top “10 under-the-radar cultural experiences in NYC,” Wave Hill’s annual summer tradition brings five exciting performances Wednesday evenings to our Great Lawn.


Extended Hours: Summer Fridays

On select evenings this July, Wave Hill will be open late—offering time to slow down, wander, and experience the Garden as it softens into evening.


Nature & Wellness


Extended Hours: Summer Fridays

Free with admission to the grounds  
Registration not required.

On select evenings this July, Wave Hill will be open late—offering time to slow down, wander, and experience the Garden as it softens into evening.


Evening Bat Adventures

Advanced registration encouraged.

Explore the fascinating world of bats during an exclusive after-hours evening nature encounter with Gotham Bat Conservancy. Learn how the Garden’s variety of trees and insects supports bat survival. After an introduction to identification techniques, head outside for a guided walk using bat detectors to listen for and observe bats in the field.


Garden Highlights Walk

Free with admission to the grounds    
Registration not required.   

Join a knowledgeable Wave Hill Garden Guide for a leisurely stroll in the gardens. Topics vary by season and the expertise of the Guide; each walk varies with the Guide leading it.


Art


Public Gallery Tour

Free with admission to the grounds     
Registration not required.   

Solo and group exhibitions at Glyndor Gallery explore the dynamic relationships between nature, culture, and site. Visitors can expect an in-depth look at artworks on view, showcasing the work of both emerging and established artists in the unique context of a public garden.  


Sunset Wednesdays: Jake Blount

Wed, Jul 15, 7:00PM – 8:00PM  

Premium Admission   
Registration not required.

Jake Blount is an award-winning scholar and performer of Black folk music based in Providence, RI. Blount delves into and sources from the archives of historic Black folk music, charting an Afrofuturist path through his findings. In his hands, the banjo, fiddle, electric guitar, and synthesizer become ceremonial objects used to channel the insurgent creativity of his forebears.





Meet the Artist: Hyunjin Park

Free with admission to the grounds     
Advanced registration encouraged.

Join us online for a virtual walkthrough of Hyunjin Park’s Sunroom exhibition Jump! with the artist and Curator of Visual Arts Rachel Raphaela Gugelberger. Centered on the core obstacle in dog agility courses— “jumps”—and her training of her pet Echo, a dog operated by AI, the program will focus on Park’s exploration of the affective impact of the non-human on humans.   

Family


Stories in the Garden

Free with admission to the grounds     
Registration not required.

Join Wave Hill and Literacy in Community Educators for storytime in the garden! Stories will come to life through interactive book readings and related activities. 


Family Art Project: Buzzing Bees

Free with admission to the grounds     
Registration not required.

Discover the fascinating world of bees and their incredible homes. Craft your own miniature bee hives using upcycled materials. Learn about life in the hive and the vital roles bees play in our ecosystem. At 11:30am families can enjoy a storytime program in the Gund Theater.

Kids on the Move! Bee Dancing

Free with admission to the grounds     
Registration not required.

Discover the fascinating world of bees and their incredible homes. Craft your own miniature bee hives using upcycled materials. Learn about life in the hive and the vital roles bees play in our ecosystem. At 11:30am families can enjoy a storytime program in the Gund Theater.


Special Events


Afternoon Tea

7-day Advanced Registration required

Enjoy delicious tea sandwiches and delectable pastries with a specialty tea selection every Tuesday and Thursday with seatings at 11AM or 2PM. Served on the Kate French Terrace or in our quaint Tea Room at historic Wave Hill House, Afternoon Teas are provided by our exclusive partner Great Performances whose menu uses local and seasonal ingredients, inspired from their own organic farm, Katchkie Farm.


Sunset Wednesdays

Premium Admission   
Registration not required.

Named by Time Out as one of the top “10 under-the-radar cultural experiences in NYC,” Wave Hill’s annual summer tradition brings five exciting performances Wednesday evenings to our Great Lawn. Pack a picnic and bring your favorite blanket or chair for an unforgettable summer evening as the sun sets over the Hudson River.  


HOURS STARTING MARCH 15: 10AM–4:30PM, Tuesday–Sunday  
Shuttle Service free from Subway and Metro-North, Saturday–Sunday

Information at 718.549.3200. On the web at wavehill.org.