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Top of the Rock Reviews

30 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, New York

Featured Review : Rockefeller Centre and Top of the Rock, New York.The Rockefeller centre is perhaps one of the must see attractions when visiting Manhattan New York. The Top of the Rock being a must do experience to take in the sights of...See Full Review

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    5 out of 5 stars

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  • Top of the Rock vs. Empire State Building

  • 5 out of 5 stars
    lavenderdays from El Segundo
  • June 9, 2025
Quote: If you’re traveling to NYC and want to see some great views, Top of the Rock is the place to go. It’s the tall building located in Rockefeller Plaza. You won’t miss it, trust me.

I like going here so much better than the Empire State Building and here’s why:

1. Shorter lines. I can’t stress this enough. The Empire State Building is always SO much more crowded. Even if you book tickets ahead of time online you can still wait up to an hour.

2. Better views.. in my opinion. You’re much closer to central park and you don’t have the Empire State Building in your way. Also when you go to the other side you can actually get the Empire State Building in your pictures!

3. Top of the Rock is about 20 stories shorter than the Empire State Building… which is plenty high, trust me! I remember the Empire State building feeling so darn high up and you can also feel the building sway. It’s terrifying, haha.
  • On top of the Rock.

  • 5 out of 5 stars
    garymarsh6 from Gravesend
  • November 30, 2025
  • Best of IgoUgo
Quote: Rockefeller Centre and Top of the Rock, New York.

The Rockefeller centre is perhaps one of the must see attractions when visiting Manhattan New York. The Top of the Rock being a must do experience to take in the sights of the vibrant city of New York.

So what is the Rockefeller Centre?

It is in fact a cluster of buildings which takes up a couple of blocks between 49th and 50th street between 5th and 7th avenue. Within the complex of buildings built in the art deco style housing the NBC studios, Radio city music hall, the concourse which is an underground warren of shops and small businesses the channel gardens and the Top of the rock observation deck at 70 stories high. There are pieces or art deco statue, art pieces and stone carvings dotted around the complex and areas with evocative names such as The international building, The British Empire building, Palazzo D’Italia and La Maison Francais.

The Top of the Rock.

Work on the Rockefeller centre began in 1930 and in total took 9 years to build. The observation decks at the top of ‘the rock’ opened in 1933 which resembled the observation deck on the top of an ocean going liner.
To reach the top of the rock you take a rapid lift up to the 67th floor to reach the first observation deck then take an escalator up to the 69th and 70th floor reaching a heady height of 850 feet above the streets way below.

My visit.

The entrance to the observation deck at the top of the rock is on 50th street where you can queue to purchase your tickets or if you are a wise bunny you should pre-buy your tickets by-passing and to avoid the sometimes very long queues. The entrance takes you into the Mezzanine area where the queues for the tickets stretch for some considerable distance or you can ride the escalator or the circular flight of stairs to the third floor if you have your tickets to the entrance level and exhibition area. Hanging in the central atrium of this massive hallway is a massive Swarovski Chandelier made up of 14,000 individual crystals and fibre optic lighting. The rainbow prisms that emanate from the crystals are quite pretty and it does look somewhat interesting.

You then pass through a security check point where your bags are passed through an X-ray machine. Walking around towards the lift area you pass through a photographic exhibition with such photos like the guys sitting on hanging girders eating their lunches from their lunch box seemingly sitting hundreds of feet above the streets below. Then comes a photo opportunity where you can sit on what appears to be the girder and pose to have your photo taken which will be ready for your collection once you have finished your visit. You can even walk across one such girder which gives you the impression that you are walking in mid air as the workers so skilfully did when building the massive tower. Next you walk into a small stand up theatre to watch a brief film about the building of the Rockefeller centre. The lift to the top takes just under a minute to reach the 67th floor. You enter one side of the lift and when it reaches the top you exit the other side.

On the 67th floor there are further exhibitions of crystal some of them are massive formations which look really intriguing. There is also a wall called the radiance wall which consists of glass panels with crystals and back lighting which enhances the look of the wall. Here you can also go out to the outside terraces to give you your first view of the New York sky line. The perimeter is surrounded by toughened glass panels which allows you unobstructed views of Manhattan below you and stretching out towards the Hudson river and New Jersey to the right and Brooklyn and the East river to the left. You can also see downtown towards Battery Park and the ferry terminal to Ellis Island, The Statue of Liberty and the Stratton Island Ferry terminal. The Empire state building is ahead of you as you are looking towards Liberty state park. It looks brilliant in the distance but to be honest I think the Chrysler building with its silvery showy top is more appealing to look at.

The views are pretty good from here and during poor weather you can sit inside the two story building without getting wet and viewing the sites through the windows. There is also a souvenir shop on this floor and the 69th floor where you can buy mementoes of your visit should you wish. Some of the mementos are not too tacky by the way.

Up a small escalator will bring you to the 69th floor where the outside deck gives you unparalleled views of Manhattan and the surrounding areas. To reach the 70th floor you walk up a short flight of steps where you can look down to the 69th floor viewing deck with its tall toughened glass panelling and telescopes dotted around which costs 25 cents for a few minutes to see further afield.

The top ultimate 70th floor looks like the deck of a ship with the air-conditioning outlet/inlet pipe work resembling the funnels of a ship. From here you get fantastic views completely unobstructed out towards Central Park, which incidentally looks like an oasis amid the tower blocks of Manhattan. You can see the tourist site-seeing helicopter flights buzzing all up and down the Hudson and East river. They look like little bees. Out towards Stratton Island you can see the tour boats heading out to Liberty state park and the defiant Lady the Statue of liberty standing proudly holding her torch.



Fear of Heights.

At this point of the review I am going to let you into a secret. I have a terrible and an irrational fear of heights and although I was wary about going up the Rock as it is affectionally known. The feelings I get when I am at a height include legs going like jelly and feeling that I am falling, dizziness and unable to focus on anything to try and regain a sense of equilibrium and stability to the point of wanting to cry and nail gripping the walls to try and stabilise myself. How daft is that???

I actually felt quite safe and did not feel ill at ease at any time. I even went right to the edge of the observation deck to take photos without feeling that I was falling unlike in other places I have visited where I have literally been frozen to the spot and like a quivering wreck. I have even had this feeling when sitting down and looking at pictures on the computer which has left me feeling physically sick for about 20 minutes. I can reassure anyone that if I can do it I am sure you will enjoy it too!

After our visit we retraced our steps back down to the 67th floor to take the lift back down to the lobby area. We had a meander for a little while around the shopping concourse ok ok only for about 10-15 minutes as I find shopping particularly boring. We then went out to the sunken plaza which is taken over as a skating ring in the winter months. We had a drink here in one of the lower plaza’s al fresco cafes admiring the views of the Art deco fountain with a beautiful golden statue of Prometheus which is 18 feet high and weighs in at an incredible eight tons.

Is it worth a visit?

I would say a resounding yes. I found the whole experience exciting and exhilarating and really enjoyed my visit to the Rock. You feel like you are on top of the world. We chose The Top of the Rock as opposed to the Empire state building and had great views of it from the rock. The main reason is that the Top of the Rock is not as popular as the Empire State building, you get better and more spectacular views and it is not quite as busy. Plus the added attractions of the art deco that is all over the place in the complex.

If you really wanted you could devote a whole day exploring the shops eateries exhibitions and all that the Rockefeller centre complex has to offer.

Currently opening times are as follows:

08:00 – Midnight. 7 Days a week 365 days a year!

Adult $25
Child $16
Senior $23

You can pre buy your tickets which I think is wise but if you do not have the time join the queue once you get there. The top of the rock is disabled friendly and wheelchair accessible.

From journals New York Weekend break part Deux

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  • Amazing view, with three levels to take it all in!

  • 5 out of 5 stars
    tobert from Salem
  • July 13, 2025
  • Best of IgoUgo
Quote: I just came back from a weekend in NYC. On previous visits I have taken the trip up to the top of the Empire State Building, but I think I liked this experience more. For starters, there was not much of a line. In a way this was almost unfortunate as there was a lot of information on the walls to entertain people while in line. Lots of history of the building, etc. I read some of the information, but I felt silly waiting in a line that didn't exist. Right before you go up in the elevator they have a short movie with a bit more history, and then you were put in one of the two elevators. Unlike any other elevator I'd ever been on, this elevator had a glass ceiling and they put lights in the elevator shaft so you could really see how far and fast you were going. Definitely a cool experience. Once at the top there were three different levels from which to see the view, plus a nice large interior space if you wanted to just take in the view from inside.

For me, the thing that made this observation platform special was the fact that you were actually on the roof of the building. Given the building's design (no spire), you are actually able to walk on the flat roof. This was a bit of a surreal experience. On the very top floor there was no safety glass which made the experience that much more exciting. The safety glass wasn't necessary as the level below was terraced out to prevent anyone from falling. Still, from the very top deck, you really did feel like you were on top of the world. The view is incredible, but the view of the Empire State Building was spectacular. I think I got about 20 pictures of just that one building. While on the first of the three levels you can actually see the letters "GE" outside the windows. But you can only see small parts of the massive letters. It was fun to try and figure out which part of which letter you were looking at. With this view, you really get a sense of how large the letters are...and how high up you are.

This visit was well worth the money. I plan to go back when the weather is warmer and spend some more time.

As an FYI, they have a ticket that allows you to go twice in one day...so you can see the view from the day and the night. Very cool!
  • Rockefeller Center

  • 4 out of 5 stars
    Uncle Phil from Brooklyn
  • March 22, 2025
Quote: You will find a bronze status named "Atlas" in front of Rockfeller Center. It located across 5th Ave from St. Patrick's Cathedral. The sculpture depicts the Ancient Greek Titan Atlas holding the heavens. The North-South axis of the sphere on his shoulders point towards the North Star. The sculpture is 15 feet tall, while the entire statue is 45 feet tall and it weighs seven tons. It was installed in 1937 and created by sculptor Lee Lawrie with the help of Rene Paul Chambellan.

Do you know that back in 1937.. people did protest about this bronze status and claiming that it looked like Mussolini.
From journals New Jersey Trip

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  • Defying Gravity

  • 5 out of 5 stars
    Liam Hetherington from Manchester
  • December 2, 2025
  • Best of IgoUgo
Quote: If Manhattan is famous for one thing it is its skyscrapers. Okay, the iron-frame construction that allowed buildings to tower so far overhead that they caress the clouds may have been pioneered in Chicago. Okay, so New York no longer holds any of the top 10 tallest skyscrapers in the world (its current best is 15th place). Yet New York more than anywhere else witnessed the apotheosis of the skyscraper. Nowhere else is there such a concentration of these manmade pinnacles lining canyon-like streets, forming their own reefs and mountain ranges. New York and skyscrapers are as inextricably linked as pastrami and rye.

Ascending a skyscraper is a must whilst in New York. And essentially the visitor has two options. The first is the Empire State Building. This of course has many advantages. The Empire State Building is the iconic building of New York. It has been immortalised in movies like An Affair To Remember, Sleepless In Seattle and – of course - King Kong. It is the tallest building in the city and the 15th tallest building in the world. By choosing to ascend to its 86th or 102nd floor ‘observatories’ you get higher in New York than anywhere else. You area also well-placed for views south to the tip of Manhattan. All this comes at a price however: $22 for the 86th floor, and an additional $15 if you want to go up to the 102nd. Furthermore, the queues are legendary!

I took the second option, which was to visit the Rockefeller Center, a network of Art Deco buildings constructed during the ‘30s under the direction of John D Rockefeller Jr.. Here, for the ‘bargain’ price of $21 each we bought tickets allowing us access to the observation decks on the 68th, 69th and 70th floors of the GE Building – the ’Top of the Rock’. While not as high as the Empire State’s Observatory (it is only the 9th tallest building in New York City), one of the ‘Rock’s’ big advantages is that from here we could actually see the Empire State Building to the south, its instantly recognisable silhouette dominating mid-town Manhattan. It does indeed soar far higher than any of its neighbours, plonked plumb centre on Manhattan’s axis. Its shape reminded me of an art deco space rocket – or a bulky and rather unpleasant syringe – due to its spindly mast (once used for mooring dirigibles). Beyond it glimmered New York harbour and its speckling of islands; on one the Statue of Liberty could just be seem, dwarfed by scale and distance. The other advantage of the Rock is that by turning north we had a spectacular view down the length of Central Park, a lushly wooded moss-green rectangle hemmed in by tower blocks. We could make out individual features – the shimmer of water from the Lake and the Reservoir, open exapanses of grass marking the Great lawn and Sheep Meadow, and the sizeable jut of the Metropolitan Museum of Art into the eastern section of the Park. To the east we could see over the East River to Brooklyn and Queens (though sadly the beautiful Chrysler Building was mostly obscured by another, less aesthetically pleasing skyscraper). And to the west the sun was sinking, sheening the Hudson River bronze and throwing the long shadows of New Jersey across towards the USS Intrepid.

The 68th and 69th floors have viewing terraces which wrap around the exteior of the building; these have tall sheet glass barriers to prevent any accidents or suicides (and hence protect themselves from lawsuits). On the 70th, the very top of the building, these are absent – as the terrace is set back from those below any potential jumper would only be able to plummet one story. The views are vertiginous however, and people with a fear of heights maybe won’t get the best out of a visit.

And essentially that is it. The good folk at the GE Building have tried to jazz things up a little bit. Beyond the ticket desk downstairs are displays and video documentaries playing up the importance of the Center in New York and painting the Rockefeller dynasty as benevolent philathropists and visionaries. You can have your photo taken on a replica iron girder to recreate the famous 1932 ‘Lunchtime atop a Skyscraper’ image and then have that printed out or put on a keyring or t-shirt for ridiculous prices. And the lift up to the 68th floor has some rather natty projections designed to give the impression that you are flying through time and space – very Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator. But all that is merely window-dressing. What we came for were the views over New York. And I find it hard to believe that these views can be beaten.

From journals New York, New York - It's a Wonderful Town!

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