New York DOOH Playbook
73 ways to win New York with DOOH
New York is not one market — it is dozens of hyper-specific audiences stacked on top of each other. This is the shortlist we use with clients: 73 real, executable DOOH plays, each mapped to a distinct audience, footprint, and daypart.
56,699
Live NYC screens
73
Micro-markets
5
Boroughs
#1
Nielsen DMA
Business & B2B
Reach the people who sign the checks
Hudson Yards / Hell's Kitchen · Manhattan
Javits Center
Turn the Javits Center's 2M+ annual expo attendees into a captive B2B audience the moment they step outside — with LinkNYC, digital urban panels, and 7-train egress screens synchronized to your show dates.
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388 live screens
Financial District · Manhattan
Wall Street / FiDi
300,000+ finance professionals pour into a 12-block area every weekday morning. A tightly-dayparted DOOH buy on the NYSE / Oculus / Fulton Center screens puts your brand in front of them at the exact moment they're most alert and most reachable.
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633 live screens
Flatiron, Chelsea, Union Square · Manhattan
Silicon Alley
Silicon Alley concentrates NYC's tech workforce into a 14-block corridor between Union Square and Herald Square. Digital bus shelters, newsstands, and LinkNYC kiosks along 5th and 6th Avenues catch them at coffee, lunch, and standup breaks.
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2,442 live screens
Midtown Manhattan · Manhattan
Midtown Lunch Hour
Two hours a day, Midtown Manhattan becomes a walking city of C-suite and VP+ professionals. A dayparted DOOH buy across Bryant Park, Grand Central, and Rockefeller Center serves them 4-7 impressions per lunch — on foot, phone-down, receptive.
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2,097 live screens
Hudson Yards · Manhattan
Hudson Yards
Hudson Yards is Manhattan's newest corporate campus and its most concentrated: BlackRock, KKR, Wells Fargo, Coach, L'Oréal, Meta, and 40+ other HQs share a single 28-acre footprint. DOOH here reaches an audience that's otherwise almost impossible to isolate.
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344 live screens
Financial District / Battery Park City · Manhattan
WTC & Brookfield Place
The reopened World Trade Center campus and neighboring Brookfield Place form the densest post-2001 finance and law footprint in the city — home to Condé Nast, Uber, Spotify, McKinsey, Goldman Sachs administrative offices, American Express, Bank of New York Mellon and dozens of AmLaw 100 firms. Their shared indoor concourses are DOOH gold.
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459 live screens
Chelsea / Hudson Yards South · Manhattan
Pier 57 & West Side Tech
Pier 57 hosts Google's NYC campus expansion, City Winery, the Market 57 food hall by James Beard, and Little Island's foot-traffic engine — with Chelsea Market, 111 Eighth Ave (Google) and the Meatpacking tech corridor all a two-block walk away. This is the densest concentration of software engineers in New York.
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401 live screens
Roosevelt Island · Manhattan
Cornell Tech / Roosevelt Island
Cornell Tech's Roosevelt Island campus — home to the Bloomberg Center, Tata Innovation Center and The House — concentrates New York's applied-research and startup-founder audience into a one-mile island served by a tram and a single subway stop.
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279 live screens
Midtown East / Park Avenue · Manhattan
Convene Corporate Summits
Convene runs New York's largest network of premium flex meeting venues — 237 Park Avenue, 101 Park Avenue, 117 W 46th, 730 Third Avenue, One Boston Place style spaces — hosting corporate summits, private board offsites and product launches every business day.
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2,052 live screens
Midtown West / Hell's Kitchen · Manhattan
Lavan Midtown Events
Lavan's West 42nd Street venues (Lavan 541, Lavan Chelsea) sit at the seam between Hudson Yards, Times Square and the Javits Center — the exact block where luxury launches, automotive reveals and PR-driven product moments cluster in New York.
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598 live screens
Greenpoint · Brooklyn
Greenpoint Studios
Greenpoint is the working center of NYC-based commercial and streaming production. Broadway Stages alone runs 50+ soundstages across the neighborhood; Steiner, Kaufman Astoria's overflow work, and dozens of independent design and post-production studios cluster within a ten-minute walk of Franklin and Manhattan Ave.
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189 live screens
Wallabout / Brooklyn Navy Yard · Brooklyn
Brooklyn Navy Yard
The Brooklyn Navy Yard is a 300-acre, 550-tenant innovation campus — one of the largest concentrations of urban manufacturing, hardware startups, media production, and green-tech companies in the country. It's a secure campus, which makes the perimeter and lobby DOOH footprint disproportionately valuable for B2B advertisers.
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59 live screens
Sunset Park · Brooklyn
Industry City
Industry City is a 6-million-square-foot, 16-building innovation campus on the Sunset Park waterfront. 8,500+ workers across 500+ tenant companies — ecommerce brands, design studios, food producers, and media tech — cycle through the same central courtyards, food halls, and retail spines every day.
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43 live screens
Downtown Brooklyn / Cadman Plaza · Brooklyn
Downtown Brooklyn Courts
Downtown Brooklyn's Cadman Plaza / Court Street corridor is one of the densest concentrations of legal, municipal, and civic decision-makers in the country. Kings County Supreme Court, the Brooklyn Federal Courthouse, Brooklyn Borough Hall, and hundreds of law firms cluster within a three-block radius.
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191 live screens
Washington Heights / Fort Washington · Manhattan
Washington Heights Medical
The Columbia University Irving Medical Center / NewYork-Presbyterian campus in Washington Heights is one of the largest and highest-ranked academic medical centers in the world. The 20-block footprint along Fort Washington Avenue and Broadway concentrates physicians, researchers, and healthcare executives in a walkable ring.
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155 live screens
Kips Bay · Manhattan
Kips Bay Hospital Corridor
The 1st Avenue corridor between 23rd and 34th is one of the most concentrated hospital and medical-school footprints in the United States — NYU Langone (Tisch, Kimmel Pavilion), Bellevue, the VA NY Harbor Healthcare System, and the NYU Grossman School of Medicine anchor a walkable medical district.
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636 live screens
Garment District · Manhattan
Garment District
The Garment District — 7th and 8th Avenues from 34th to 42nd — is still the operating heart of American fashion sourcing and manufacturing. Design studios, fabric jobbers, trim and notion houses, wholesale showrooms, and the FIT student body cluster in a ten-block grid unlike anywhere else in the country.
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1,035 live screens
Penn District / Midtown South · Manhattan
Penn District
Vornado's Penn District revitalization has turned the blocks around West 34th Street and 7th–8th Avenues into one of the newest premium office footprints in Manhattan. PENN 1 and PENN 2 now anchor tenants like Apple, Meta, Cisco, Samsung, Madison Square Garden Company, and Peloton — an ~11-million-square-foot tech-and-media campus adjacent to Penn Station's 650,000 daily commuters.
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601 live screens
Sports & Entertainment
Own the moment fans exit the venue
Penn Station / Midtown West · Manhattan
Madison Square Garden
20,000 fans exit Madison Square Garden in under 12 minutes after every Knicks game, Rangers game, and headline concert. A pre-triggered DOOH burst on 7th and 8th Avenues turns that egress into a captive, high-energy audience for QSR, sports betting, ride-share, and streaming.
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892 live screens
Prospect Heights / Atlantic Yards · Brooklyn
Barclays Center
The Atlantic Avenue-Barclays Center transit hub is Brooklyn's densest DOOH surface. Nine subway lines and the LIRR converge here, and every Nets, Islanders, and concert egress funnels through it. A geofenced DOOH burst reaches Brooklyn-native millennials at peak cultural energy.
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205 live screens
Concourse / South Bronx · Bronx
Yankee Stadium
81 home games and dozens of concerts push 3M+ fans through a 4-block Bronx perimeter each year — most arriving by subway, many by car on the Major Deegan. Game-day DOOH here is the sharpest lever for sports betting, beer, QSR, and mass-consumer brands in the tri-state.
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196 live screens
Flushing Meadows – Corona Park · Queens
US Open / Citi Field
Two weeks a year, Flushing Meadows becomes the East Coast's densest concentration of tennis enthusiasts, high-income sports fans, and corporate hospitality guests. A synchronized Grand Central Parkway + Willets Point buy hits them on arrival, between sessions, and again on the way home.
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503 live screens
Marathon Route (BK 4th Ave + MN 1st Ave) · Manhattan
NYC Marathon
The TCS New York City Marathon is the world's largest marathon by finisher count. On the first Sunday of November, 55,000+ runners and 2 million spectators line the same 26.2-mile course — with 4th Avenue in Brooklyn and 1st Avenue in Manhattan as the two densest cheering zones.
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1,145 live screens
Randall's Island / East Harlem / Astoria approaches · Manhattan
Governors Ball
Governors Ball is New York's flagship music festival — a three-day June event on Randall's Island that draws 150,000+ Gen Z and Millennial attendees. Because Randall's Island is only reachable via a handful of pedestrian bridges and shuttle routes, the pre- and post-festival transit windows create predictable, captive DOOH targeting opportunities.
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287 live screens
Cultural & Tourist
High-dwell tourist and cultural audiences
Theater District / Times Square · Manhattan
Broadway Theater District
13 million Broadway tickets are sold every year, and nearly every ticket-holder walks the same 8-block grid between 5 and 7 PM on their way to dinner and the show. That's the most affluent, most attentive, most photograph-happy tourist audience in America — hiding in plain sight.
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1,568 live screens
Rockefeller Center · Manhattan
Radio City Music Hall
Radio City queues stretch a full block along 6th Avenue for the Rockettes' Christmas Spectacular, Tribeca screenings, and A-list residencies. Slow-moving lines translate directly into exceptional DOOH dwell time — 4-8 minutes of face-time per impression.
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1,096 live screens
Battery Maritime Building / Governors Island · Manhattan
Governors Island Ferry
Governors Island — the 172-acre former Coast Guard base managed by the Trust for Governors Island — has become New York's fastest-growing weekend leisure destination, anchored by the QC NY spa, seasonal food halls, art programming and the ferry line that queues down the Battery Maritime Building.
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135 live screens
Belmont / Arthur Avenue · Bronx
Arthur Avenue Bronx
Arthur Avenue and the surrounding Belmont neighborhood — often described as the real Little Italy of New York — draws a weekend regional food and cultural audience that indexes above median on gourmet, hospitality and premium consumer categories.
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127 live screens
Tribeca · Manhattan
Tribeca Festival
For roughly ten days each June, Tribeca becomes the walkable center of gravity for the film industry — festival passes, premiere lines, and industry after-parties concentrate the kind of audience LinkedIn charges $30 CPC to reach into a six-block radius around Spring, Greenwich, and Varick.
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301 live screens
Lincoln Square · Manhattan
Lincoln Center
Lincoln Center is the country's largest performing-arts complex — the Met Opera, NY Philharmonic, NYC Ballet, Jazz at Lincoln Center, and the Chamber Music Society all share one 16.3-acre plaza. Every performance evening, a wealthy, appointment-driven audience walks the same three-block radius twice.
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264 live screens
Tribeca / Chelsea (Fashion Week Venues) · Manhattan
NYFW
For roughly eight days in February and September, New York Fashion Week concentrates the global luxury and fashion industry into a handful of venues — Spring Studios in Tribeca, the West Side piers, and the rotating unofficial show spaces around Meatpacking and Chelsea. The audience is unrivaled for luxury reach density.
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367 live screens
Rockefeller Center · Manhattan
Rockefeller Center Holiday
From the tree lighting the Wednesday after Thanksgiving through early January, the block bounded by 5th–6th and 49th–50th becomes the most photographed sidewalk in the world. Tourist volume around the Rockefeller Center tree, the rink, and Saks Fifth Ave regularly overwhelms the surrounding pedestrian network.
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575 live screens
Transit & Commuter Hubs
Intercept the daily commute at scale
Midtown West / Herald Square · Manhattan
Penn Station Commuters
Penn Station moves more than 600,000 daily commuters — the largest transit hub in North America. Digital screens inside the entrance corridors and adjacent 34th Street urban panels catch a captive suburban audience twice a day, five days a week.
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889 live screens
Midtown East · Manhattan
Grand Central Terminal
Grand Central is where Westchester and Fairfield County meet Midtown. A concentric buy across the 42nd / Lexington / Park Avenue perimeter puts wealth managers, luxury brands, and premium consumer categories in front of the exact HHI they want to reach.
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1,423 live screens
Jamaica / Van Wyck Corridor · Queens
JFK Airport Arrivals
JFK handles 60M+ passengers a year. The Van Wyck Expressway and airport exit loops funnel every rideshare, taxi, and shuttle out of the terminals past a small set of high-impact digital roadside boards — the first ad every international arrival sees on U.S. soil.
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343 live screens
East Elmhurst · Queens
LaGuardia Airport
LaGuardia is the East Coast's default domestic business-travel airport. A tight geofence around the terminal ground-transportation zones and the Grand Central Parkway approach delivers frequent-flyer reach at expensed-hotel intent moments.
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752 live screens
Midtown West / Hell's Kitchen · Manhattan
Port Authority Bus Terminal
The Port Authority Bus Terminal is North America's busiest bus terminal — 200k+ daily commuters funneling through a single 8th Avenue / 42nd Street footprint. Digital spectaculars and street furniture at this intersection deliver frequency at scale that few DOOH buys match.
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972 live screens
Whitehall & St. George · Manhattan
Staten Island Ferry
The Staten Island Ferry moves 65,000 daily riders across two terminals for free. That means high-dwell wait times, phones-up but eyes-forward, and one of the most captive audience conditions in New York City DOOH.
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253 live screens
Midtown West / Hudson Yards · Manhattan
Moynihan Train Hall
Moynihan Train Hall — the $1.6 billion James A. Farley Building conversion opened January 2021 — is Amtrak's flagship New York terminal and the main westside LIRR concourse. Its 92-foot skylit hall is one of the most premium indoor DOOH environments in the country.
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736 live screens
Financial District / World Trade Center · Manhattan
Oculus PATH Commuters
The Santiago Calatrava-designed World Trade Center Transportation Hub — the Oculus — is the ground-floor arrival gate for PATH commuters from Jersey City, Hoboken and Newark. It moves upwards of 250,000 people per weekday into Lower Manhattan.
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424 live screens
Jamaica · Queens
Jamaica Station JFK AirTrain
Jamaica Station is the largest LIRR station outside Penn and the only rail-to-JFK-AirTrain interchange — the audience is a mix of international business travelers, airline crew, JFK-area hospitality staff and transit-reliant Queens commuters.
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153 live screens
Crown Heights / Prospect Heights / Bed-Stuy · Brooklyn
Atlantic Avenue Brooklyn
Atlantic Avenue is the geographic and commercial spine of central Brooklyn — anchored by the Barclays Center / Atlantic Terminal transit hub and cutting through Boerum Hill, Prospect Heights, Crown Heights and Bedford-Stuyvesant. It is Brooklyn's most legible cross-borough audience corridor.
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628 live screens
Washington Heights · Manhattan
GWB Bus Terminal
The Port Authority-operated George Washington Bridge Bus Terminal (Fort Washington & 178th) is Upper Manhattan's regional gateway — feeding NJ Transit and private carrier buses from Bergen County into the A-train system and directly into the Columbia University Irving Medical Center / New York-Presbyterian corridor.
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211 live screens
Long Island City / Hunters Point · Queens
Long Island City Waterfront
Long Island City's Hunters Point and Court Square waterfront has become New York's fastest-growing residential + tech workforce corridor — home to Amazon's Fresh HQ operations, JetBlue, MOMA PS1, and a dense cluster of luxury waterfront towers with a direct 7 / E / M / G / N / W subway pipeline into Manhattan.
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222 live screens
Midtown East / Upper East Side · Manhattan
Hamptons Jitney
Every Thursday afternoon and Friday morning from Memorial Day through Labor Day, the sidewalks at 40th & Lexington and 86th & 3rd fill with the wealthiest weekend commute in America. The Hampton Jitney and Luxury Liner queues turn two ordinary Midtown corners into a captive HNW audience with predictable dwell time.
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430 live screens
East Side Manhattan (FDR Corridor) · Manhattan
FDR Drive
The FDR Drive is the most reliably congested six lanes in New York. Weekday AM and PM peaks routinely see stop-and-go for miles between the Battery and 96th Street — turning a commute into a captive dwell window on the digital spectaculars along the east side of Manhattan.
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2,665 live screens
West Side Manhattan (Route 9A) · Manhattan
West Side Highway
Route 9A / West Side Highway is the primary north-south commuter artery on the west side of Manhattan. Between the George Washington Bridge and Battery Park, it feeds every major corporate corridor — Hudson Yards, Chelsea Piers, Tribeca, and the Financial District — and moves the fleet, black-car, and executive-driver audience past the same spectaculars twice a day.
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3,124 live screens
Hell's Kitchen / Lincoln Tunnel Approach · Manhattan
Lincoln Tunnel
The Lincoln Tunnel Manhattan approach is one of the most congested captive audiences in the country. The Port Authority Bus Terminal handles 8,000+ bus movements per day and the tunnel itself moves 100,000+ vehicles daily — creating multi-mile backlogs on the 9th and 10th Avenue approaches where every driver and passenger has 10–20 minutes of screen-time.
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321 live screens
Long Island City / Hunters Point · Queens
Queensboro/Midtown Tunnel
The Queensboro Bridge and Queens-Midtown Tunnel move over 200,000 vehicles a day between Queens and Manhattan. Their Queens-side approach plazas — Northern Boulevard, Queens Plaza, and the Long Island City feeder streets — become predictable congestion zones with prime dwell time for digital screens.
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305 live screens
Luxury, Retail & Shopping
Premium retail corridors with high-HHI dwell
Midtown / Plaza District · Manhattan
Fifth Avenue Luxury
The 10-block stretch of Fifth Avenue between 49th and 59th is the highest-rent retail corridor on Earth. A premium DOOH buy on adjacent street-level displays puts your brand next to Louis Vuitton, Tiffany, Bergdorf, and Apple's cube — visible to the exact HHI you want.
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1,097 live screens
SoHo · Manhattan
SoHo Fashion Shopping
SoHo's cobblestone streets slow foot traffic to a browse pace. Digital urban panels on Broadway, Prince, and Spring capture Gen Z and Millennial shoppers with dwell times that dwarf Midtown — perfect for fashion, beauty, and DTC brand launches.
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415 live screens
Williamsburg · Brooklyn
Williamsburg Waterfront
Williamsburg's Saturday and Sunday leisure economy is a distinct DOOH audience — affluent hip creatives, young families, and weekend travelers browsing Bedford Avenue and the North 5th ferry landing at a pace Manhattan can't match.
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286 live screens
Meatpacking District · Manhattan
Meatpacking Nightlife
Meatpacking's Thursday–Saturday nightlife window is one of the most concentrated high-income foodie audiences in NYC. Late-night dayparted DOOH on 14th and 9th delivers frequency against a crowd that's making high-consideration category decisions in real time.
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218 live screens
DUMBO · Brooklyn
DUMBO Creatives
DUMBO stacks Brooklyn's densest cluster of creative agencies and tech design shops on top of one of the most photographed tourist blocks in the world. A targeted street-level buy hits both audiences with the same inventory footprint.
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92 live screens
57th Street / Central Park South · Manhattan
Billionaires' Row
Billionaires' Row — the stretch of 57th Street between Park and 8th Avenues — concentrates the tallest and most expensive residential towers on Earth: Central Park Tower, 111 West 57th, 432 Park Avenue, One57 and 220 Central Park South. The addressable street is short, and its audience is finite and reachable.
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1,110 live screens
Hudson River Park (Battery to 59th) · Manhattan
Hudson River Park Greenway
The Hudson River Park Greenway — the 4.5-mile Hudson River Park managed by the Hudson River Park Trust — is the most-used bike and run path in the country, with an audience that indexes far above city median on fitness, wellness, athleisure and premium consumer categories.
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10,690 live screens
NoMad / Madison Square · Manhattan
NoMad Design District
NoMad (North of Madison Square) is New York's densest concentration of design showrooms, architecture firms and premium residential buyers — anchored by Madison Square Park, the Flatiron Building, the historic 200 Fifth showroom building, and dozens of designer and furniture flagships along Broadway and Fifth from 23rd to 32nd.
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1,276 live screens
Downtown Flushing · Queens
Flushing Downtown
Downtown Flushing's Main Street / Roosevelt Avenue intersection — the eastern terminus of the 7 train — is one of the highest-throughput pedestrian intersections in the United States, serving one of the largest and most affluent Asian-American consumer markets in the country.
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119 live screens
Upper West Side · Manhattan
Upper West Side Families
The Upper West Side between 72nd and 96th is one of the highest-density concentrations of affluent, education-focused families in the country. Broadway and Amsterdam become predictable school-run corridors twice a day, with the same HNW household decision-makers walking the same three-block stretch morning and afternoon.
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536 live screens
Stuyvesant Town / Peter Cooper Village · Manhattan
Stuy Town
Stuyvesant Town and Peter Cooper Village together form the largest private residential development in Manhattan — 110 buildings, ~11,000 apartments, and ~30,000 residents on a single 80-acre superblock between 14th and 23rd, First Avenue and the FDR.
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260 live screens
Cultural, Academic & Nightlife
Cultural, academic, and late-night micro-audiences
Lower East Side · Manhattan
Lower East Side Late Night
The LES late-night audience is a specific NYC subculture — 25-40 young professionals, service-industry workers coming off shift, and artists on their real schedule. A midnight–4 AM LinkNYC daypart on Delancey / Essex / Allen delivers them at a moment no other channel can reach.
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437 live screens
Upper East Side · Manhattan
Museum Mile
Museum Mile is 23 blocks of concentrated cultural foot traffic — the Met, Guggenheim, Neue Galerie, Cooper Hewitt, Jewish Museum, and El Museo del Barrio all sit on Fifth Avenue between 82nd and 105th. Digital bus shelters lining this corridor deliver an audience that no other footprint replicates.
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780 live screens
Chelsea / Meatpacking · Manhattan
High Line Pedestrians
The High Line delivers 8M+ annual visitors to a narrow strip of elevated park. Street-level digital at the elevator and stair exit points intercepts that audience the moment they hit ground level — receptive, phone-out, and browsing what's next.
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473 live screens
Central Park perimeter · Manhattan
Central Park Fitness
Central Park's 6.1-mile loop is the East Coast's default runners' course. Street furniture at the major park-entry plazas — Columbus Circle, Grand Army, Engineers' Gate — puts athleisure, wellness, and premium athletic brands directly in the runners' warm-up and cool-down sightline.
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986 live screens
Greenwich Village · Manhattan
NYU / Washington Square
NYU's 50,000+ students spill across Greenwich Village every hour of the school day. The LinkNYC and urban-panel density around Washington Square Park delivers one of the most efficient Gen Z reach plays in New York City.
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760 live screens
Morningside Heights · Manhattan
Columbia / Morningside
Columbia University, Barnard, Union Theological, and Manhattan School of Music stack a dense academic and research community into a 10-block Morningside Heights footprint. Broadway and Amsterdam Avenue digital delivers this audience with almost no competing message clutter.
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184 live screens
Koreatown / Midtown South · Manhattan
Koreatown Diners
Koreatown's 32nd Street 'K-Town' block delivers one of NYC's most concentrated foodie and K-culture-fan audiences. Digital urban panels along this single corridor hit dinner-hour and late-night diners at the exact moment they're deciding where to eat next.
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678 live screens
Times Square · Manhattan
Times Square Programmatic
Times Square spectaculars have historically demanded six-figure minimums and multi-week commitments. Programmatic access changes the math — bid on specific screens for specific hours, run a one-day takeover, or layer a Times Square moment into a broader NYC plan without the traditional buy-in.
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1,088 live screens
Meatpacking District · Manhattan
Meatpacking Private Clubs
The Meatpacking District's private-member ecosystem — Soho House Meatpacking, Ned NoMad-adjacent traffic, Zero Bond members crossing town, plus flagship restaurants Pastis, Catch and STK — creates a nightly high-value creative and executive audience along Gansevoort, Little West 12th and 14th Street.
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181 live screens
Williamsburg · Brooklyn
Williamsburg Bedford Ave
Bedford Avenue between N 3rd and N 12th Streets is Williamsburg's high street — the densest pedestrian retail spine in North Brooklyn, home to the L-train Bedford stop, dozens of DTC brand flagships, and a weekend audience that indexes highest in the city on early-adopter and cultural-influence metrics.
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266 live screens
Harlem · Manhattan
Harlem 125th
125th Street is Harlem's commercial main street and one of the most culturally significant retail corridors in the United States. The Apollo Theater, the 125th Street subway junctions (2/3, A/B/C/D, and Metro-North), and the retail and civic institutions between Malcolm X Blvd and St. Nicholas turn a single mile into a high-volume pedestrian corridor.
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269 live screens
Bushwick · Brooklyn
Bushwick Nightlife
The Jefferson Street and Morgan Avenue L-train stops anchor the country's most reliably trend-setting nightlife economy. From 10 PM Friday through 3 AM Sunday, thousands of Gen Z and Millennial tastemakers move on foot between Bossa Nova Civic Club, House of Yes, Nowadays, Elsewhere, and the rotating warehouse-venue calendar.
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81 live screens
Astoria · Queens
Astoria
Astoria's 30th Avenue and Steinway Street corridors are the heart of a young-professional neighborhood that has doubled its coffee, cocktail, and casual-dining footprint in the last decade. Media, tech, and creative-agency workers commuting one N/W stop from Midtown fill the sidewalks morning, evening, and weekend.
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303 live screens
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