Attractions
- Alice in Wonderland
- Andrew H. Green Bench
- Arsenal
- Artist's Gate
- Balto
- Bandshell
- Belvedere Castle
- Bethesda Terrace
- Bethesda Fountain
- Bridges of Central Park
- Bow Bridge
- Gapstow Bridge
- Greyshot Arch
- Greywacke Arch
- Inscope Arch
- Trefoil Arch
- Carousel
- Cherry Hill
- Children's Zoo
- Conservatory Garden
- Conservatory Water
- Dairy
- Delacorte Music Clock
- Delacorte Theatre
- Discovery Center
- Grand Army Plaza
- Great Lawn
- Hallett Nature Sanctuary
- Hans Christian Andersen
- Harlem Meer
- Heckscher Ballfields
- Heckscher Playground
- Lake
- Lasker Pool & Rink
- Loch
- Loeb Boathouse
- Mall
- Nature Observatory
- North Meadow
- Obelisk
- Pond
- Ramble
- Reservoir
- Shakespeare Garden
- Sheep Meadow
- Still Hunt
- Strawberry Fields
- SummerStage
- Summit Rock
- Swedish Cottage
- Tavern on the Green
- Tennis Center
- Turtle Pond
- Victorian Gardens
- Wollman Rink
Discovery Center
Location: Inside the Park at 110th Street and Lenox Avenue
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Hours: 10am-5pm, Tuesday- Sunday
Catch-and-Release Fishing; April to October; Tuesday to Sunday; 10am-4pm
(212) 860-1370
The Charles A. Dana Discovery Center is located at the northeast corner of the Harlem Meer andfeatures the park’s only environmental education center. It also hosts children’s workshops throughout the year. It originally opened in 1993 and boasts a myriad of different programs throughout the year, everything form musical performances to the loaning of fishing gear for use in the Meer. It also serves as the upper park’s visitor center and offers seasonal exhibits in its Great Hall, often in collaboration with other City cultural institutions.
The Center is named for Charles A. Dana, a newspaper editor and the assistant secretary of war during the Civil War. He was the editor of the New York "Tribune" from 1848 until 1862. During the war, he served an important role as mediator between General Grant, Edwin Stanton (secretary of war), and Abraham Lincoln. He is most commonly remembered as the owner of and guiding editorial voice behind the New York "Sun."
The northern end of the park was the last to be constructed as the blocks from 106th to 110th Sts. were the last to be purchased. Nestled up in the north east corner the Harlem Meer, at 11 acres the second largest man made body of water inside the park, considered to be one of the loveliest and It went through an extensive renovation during the mid-nineties .











