Business in NYC
English
Español
Français
Português
Deutsch
languageEN
New York City Tourism & Conventions
Now in NYC
Things To Do
Eat & Drink
Where to Stay
Maps & Guides
New York City Tourism & Conventions
search

Sunnyside. Photo: Matthew Penrod

A nighttime street scene in Sunnyside, Queens, New York, featuring a glowing neon "Sunnyside" sign and a colorful art deco building in the background. Pedestrians cross the wet street lined with shops and lights.

One Night in Sunnyside, Queens

default
Emma Diab

Published 05/13/2025

Editor's Note: This series is a three-stop snapshot of what we at NYC Tourism want you to know about our favorite neighborhoods. In this installment, NYC Tourism’s Content Director Emma Diab takes us on an evening out in her neighborhood.

Sunnyside has never been one of the City’s go-to tourist neighborhoods, which is probably why it still feels like it’s meant to be lived in. I should know; I grew up here! Midtown is only a few stops away on the 7 train, and you can be in Manhattan in under 20 minutes. While Sunnyside has changed over the years, the neighborhood is not trying to perform the “New York City” act; it just authentically is.

Sunnyside was first developed in the early 1900s, with the historic Sunnyside Gardens district designed as one of the country’s first planned communities, with modest brick homes and shared courtyards. Today, it’s one of the most diverse zip codes in the US. You’ll hear Spanish, Korean, Romanian, Turkish, Tagalog, Urdu and Nepali spoken on the streets on any given day. The diversity also shows up in the food, of course—Mexican restaurants next to Colombian bakeries next to Irish pubs—and in the storefronts, where the signs shift languages every few feet.

While writing about Sunnyside does feel a little like giving away my best-kept secrets, neighborhoods only stay alive when the people in them care enough to keep the good parts going. So I won’t be gatekeeping!

There’s a lot you can do on a Saturday night in Sunnyside—catch a soccer game at Bar 43, see comedy at Sanger Hall or try whatever’s brewing (literally or otherwise) at Alewife. But if you’re in the mood for a slower evening, the kind where you actually talk to the people you came with, here’s what I recommend.

Share
People dine outdoors at a sidewalk café called Claret on a city corner. The café has string lights, a red awning, and a chalkboard menu. A traffic signal and brick apartment buildings are visible in the background.

1
Enjoy wine and small plates at Claret Wine Bar

Take a walk through the historic Sunnyside Gardens district and then make your way over to Claret on Skillman Avenue. This cozy wine bar features a daily happy hour where you can get a $30 bottle of house wine paired with a margherita pizza or a three-item charcuterie selection. Pop in on a Friday for live music: jazz, classic rock or even a live flamenco performance. Their menu items work well with an ever-changing wine list, especially the cheese and charcuterie and their signature pizzas (the goat cheese and white truffle champignon pizza is a neighborhood favorite).

Learn More
A couple dances tango passionately on stage; the woman wears a red dress and heels, the man a dark pinstripe suit. Musicians playing string instruments and double bass perform in the background.

2
Catch a performance at the Thalia Spanish Theatre

The Thalia has been around since 1977, making it the borough’s longest-running bilingual Spanish-language theater—and, if you ask a Sunnysider, one of its most underappreciated cultural spaces. The intimate black-box theater is just a few blocks away from the famous Sunnyside Arch on Bliss Street, offering plays by Latin American artists, folkloric dance and other dance and musical performances, sometimes in English, sometimes in Spanish and sometimes in both. I don’t speak Spanish, so I tend to stick to the dance performances. (It’s even easier if you go around the holidays and you know the story of Christmas.) I caught Navidad: A Mexican American Christmas by the Calpulli Dance Company a few years ago, where the protagonist’s colorful dream sequences about her family’s Mexican holiday traditions meet new customs she’s learned in school (like The Nutcracker)—think Aztec dance numbers and toy soldiers in mariachi-inspired garb. It’s not a huge venue, so it was exciting to be in the mix. The past few years have also featured Navidad en Colombia, a collection of folkloric dance performances by the Mestizo Art Center.

Learn More
A man walks past parked cars and a bar called "ROGUE" with string lights above the entrance. The bar is on a city street, next to a laundromat and another building.

3
Cocktails (and maybe karaoke) at Rogue

Rogue Bar is right next door to Thalia, and it’s a perfect contrast to the more polished start of the evening. This cocktail spot has just the right amount of energy—dim lighting, a solid playlist and a crowd that ranges from post-shift restaurant workers to locals on first dates. Head there on Thursdays for karaoke, but other events include trivia, tabletop game nights and paint and sips. But even when nothing’s officially happening, Rogue is a great cross section of Sunnysiders looking to have a good evening. Get into the local spirit and try one of Rogue’s signature cocktails, the Sunnyside Boulevardier, bourbon whiskey with Campari, vermouth, cinnamon brown sugar and simple syrup.

Learn More

Newsletter

What's good in NYC? From coverage of the latest attractions in the five boroughs to deals on Broadway show tickets, incredible cuisine and more, our emails will make sure you never miss a thing.

* Required Fields