DEFINITELY GO TO Bang Restaurant in Flushing! It s along Kissena Blvd! Some other places to note is East Buffet (upper and lower levels along Maple Ave. and Main St.) and Grandma's Dim Sum (in Skyview Mall along College Pt Blvd.)
I'm an English/Mandarin/Cantonese speaking person of Chinese descent born in Vietnam eating lumpia and Chinese spring rolls as I watch this video. Thanks, Thea.
an ambitious goal, but you should make a video like this on every line in the system! this is my favorite video that you’ve made by far, maybe because I’ve never been to queens and really want to go, but I think this is a super interesting way of doing a neighborhood overview in New York.
Something worth to note:when the line was built, the land along the 7 was very rural, but it was still being built. People at the time were able to look far into the future, and vision the future growth and population of what was at the time middle of no where. This is unlikely to happen now(and we barely have any subway extensions now in NYC)
I have a neighbor who told me a story I found hilarious. She's from Romania (old Hungary parts) and told me how, back in the 90s, her family came to visit her in Forest Hills, Queens. One day while she had to run some errands, her family decided to go for a walk without telling her. When she came back, they were missing. This was before everyone had cellphones so she had no idea what happened to then. She was freaking out, they were in a new city, they could get lost, etc. Eventually they came back and she told them that they can't just go out walking in a city they don't know without telling her. One of her parents responded with "oh no, it's ok. We were in a very safe area. There were a lot of tourists". They were walking around Forest Hills/Rego Park. They heard all the different languages and assumed that means it must be a tourist area! 😂
I remember the brand new blue gray subway cars to the 1964-1965 World's Fair and Shea Stadium. The subway fare was 15 cents I was 8 years old way back them
Hi I'm new on US and New York as an international student from Bangladesh. I'd like to add one thing, the area around 73rd St Roosevelt Avenue/Jackson Heights is now filled with Bengali people and stores from Bangladesh. When you get out of 74th St Roosevelt Avenue/Jackson Heights subway, you'll see a lot of shops and food places from Bangladesh across the street. Recently 73rd St has been named Little Bangladesh. If you want to try some delicious food from Bangladesh, you must visit the place! Honestly whenever I feel homesick and I miss my home, I just go to Jackson Heights and just be in the crowd. Feels really great and really grateful for that! Also love your channel and content! I'm also been crazy about New York Subway and it's craziness and history haha. And you're channel has been so fun. Amazing content!
Great concept of a video! I wondered where the "22.7 miles" for Line 7's length comes from. Maybe it's all revenue (both local tracks & the express 3rd track east of Queensboro Plaza) track included? The "as the crow flies" distance from 34th Street Hudson Yards to Flushing Main Street is about 9.0 miles, so the "curve" in LIC would add no more than 1 mile to the Route Length (counting all tracks for the services only once)
"The International Express" Quite the fitting name for the 7 train. You could go from South Asia to East Asia to South-East Asia to South America and more in one shot!
For restaurants I’ll give my favorite in each neighborhood along the 7, but there are so so so many 1. Flushing - Shanghai you garden (there are so many options lol - spicy palace is good, also flower and dessert is a little pricey but good) 2. East corona - Juquila is an absurdly good Mexican restaurant, highly recommend their mole oaxaqueño - for dessert maybe try Punto Ecuatoriano 3. Elmhurst - urubamba is great for Peruvian food, also great northern Thai food like Ayada and Khao Kang has good Thai desserts 4. Jackson heights - personally my favorite neighborhood esp cause of the open street, there’re the Fuschka food trucks, theres Phayul for Himalayan food - also good momos - like just do a whole Momo run when you get off the 74th st station there are 90 million options (my favorite is Nepali Bhanchha Ghat) 5. Woodside - little Manila, Renee’s is great 6. Sunny side - Rincón melania for Ecuadorian but there are many 7. Long Island city - tbh I consider this more Manhattan/brooklyn nowadays but that isn’t bad! And yes 10 years ago it was SO different but I don’t have a top recommendation… except Terry and yaki the food truck SO GOOD
Great video. As a Queens kid, I will always love my hometown. For more, read the fantastic book; International Express, by Stephane Tonnelat and William Kornblum published in 2017 about the diversity along the line, and also City of Gods by Scott Hanson who writes about all the churches in Flushing. The diversity is wonderful. I worked for NYCTransit for 14 years and the Flushing #7 line is the best-run, most frequent line in the city.
I lived in NYC until 2005. Looks like ‘much water has flown under the bridge and beyond. LIC is a surprise. I would love to visit NY one day to see all the developments.
NYC has a severe housing shortage. Every single one of those towers going up in LIC is critical for the housing supply. Without a robust increase in the housing supply NYC will continue on its path to becoming a place where only the very rich and very poor live. Without tall buildings the diversity of NYC is in jeopardy and even midrise/low-rise buildings along the 7 train line will become unaffordable.
Cool video. I love the 7! I live in Upstate, and when I come down to the City, I keep my hotel costs down by staying in Flushing and riding the 7 across to Manhattan. I love to stop along the way to eat at all the delicious restaurants, and like you said, Flushing Meadows Park is a delightful charm. I love it all!
My favorite story about the 7 is the time I was walking to get some food on main st in flushing, and a kid came out of the subway with his dad and went "wow dad we're in china!!". His dad looked so embarrassed but it was really funny and pretty much sums up how different this part of queens is compared to almost anywhere else in the country. Queens has some of the coolest and most underrated neighborhoods and anyone visiting NYC should 100% check it out. Also dim sum garden by the flushing lirr 10/10
What I like about the 7 is that it's the only line in IRT to operate in Queens with 11 car sets, and that it's the only line to serve next to a BMT line at a whole station, being Queensboro Plaza.
I don't live in NYC but last time I visited ...some guy that I was walking by in Penn Station randomly asked me if I knew Yiddish! Very informative vlog! Thanks for sharing beautiful lady😘😘😘xox
I heard french a few times while I was at the laundromat in Elmhurst. Though most of Queens speak spanish, I hear Thai in Woodside. Though it’s no surprise that I hear bisaya while at a laundromat located in front of Jollibee. And the laundromat is owned by a cantonese speaking family. My favorite is going to the east end of the 7 Train, and I’m transported to Little Taiwan. West end of the 7 Train is also nice, as it’s the new shiny neighborhood of Hudson Yards and the very calming elevated garden walkway of the High Line. When I’m at Court Square or Queensboro Plaza, it’s transplants from other states. I have noticed more korean speakers getting on or off the two stations.
What about Forest Hills, Kew Gardens, Bayside, Douglaston and Little Neck? These are solidly middle-upper middle and even upper class areas. (This is in reference to your comment on "the rest of Queens.") Not to mention Jamaica Estates.
Queens is cool. I lived in Laurelton. Which is way on the other side though. You'll find all kinds of people living there and mostly West Indian restaurants. If you're into curry goat and oxtail, check out the area. They're only 4 of them but they are all great!
The entire borough of Queens has different cultures of food and restaurants around different neighborhoods. Although I don’t live in Queens but I do take the 7 train sometimes to Flushing-Main Street or get off at Mets-Willest Point when I catch a Mets game. There’s a lot of interesting things that I know about Chinatown and of course my neighborhood used to be mostly Italian but time after time it started to become Bensonhurst Chinatown. I think they are very talented and inspiring people who I had a friend like years ago who was Chinese and Italian. Queens has like Greek culture in Astoria and the list continues. As of having an Italian/Polish heritage I wanna doing many researches on cultural history of any family ancestors.
What I've heard is that Manhattan is the Taishanese Chinatown, Flushing is the Mandarin Chinatown, Sunset Park is the Fuzhounese Chinatown, and Bensonhurst is the Cantonese Chinatown
Looks like NYC has an interesting mix of cultures and neighbourhoods in each portion of the city. However, in London it is more dispersed and doesn’t really stand out that much. Still multiple languages are spoken here too.
Hi! Coming to NY in August. In some of your metro card videos, you mention the payment system being revamped and that the metro card could change in 2023. Has that happened yet? THANK YOU for the vids! #subwaysuperhero
...And if one happens to be taking the 7 Train to Flushing on the way to a Mets baseball game, be prepared to hear big league conversations in Spanish and Japanese as well as English, French (français) and a whole lot of 300-way trash talking about tennis. 🤣😂
I realize there are multiple languages spoken in China. I said "Chinese" as shorthand to mean Mandarin and Cantonese.
DEFINITELY GO TO Bang Restaurant in Flushing! It s along Kissena Blvd! Some other places to note is East Buffet (upper and lower levels along Maple Ave. and Main St.) and Grandma's Dim Sum (in Skyview Mall along College Pt Blvd.)
I'm an English/Mandarin/Cantonese speaking person of Chinese descent born in Vietnam eating lumpia and Chinese spring rolls as I watch this video. Thanks, Thea.
You sound like an authentic Queens resident!
@@UrbanCaffeine Yep!
an ambitious goal, but you should make a video like this on every line in the system! this is my favorite video that you’ve made by far, maybe because I’ve never been to queens and really want to go, but I think this is a super interesting way of doing a neighborhood overview in New York.
Something worth to note:when the line was built, the land along the 7 was very rural, but it was still being built.
People at the time were able to look far into the future, and vision the future growth and population of what was at the time middle of no where.
This is unlikely to happen now(and we barely have any subway extensions now in NYC)
I have a neighbor who told me a story I found hilarious. She's from Romania (old Hungary parts) and told me how, back in the 90s, her family came to visit her in Forest Hills, Queens. One day while she had to run some errands, her family decided to go for a walk without telling her. When she came back, they were missing. This was before everyone had cellphones so she had no idea what happened to then. She was freaking out, they were in a new city, they could get lost, etc.
Eventually they came back and she told them that they can't just go out walking in a city they don't know without telling her. One of her parents responded with "oh no, it's ok. We were in a very safe area. There were a lot of tourists".
They were walking around Forest Hills/Rego Park. They heard all the different languages and assumed that means it must be a tourist area! 😂
Lol. That's too funny! Thanks for sharing.
In Brooklyn, New York, Just the 'G', 'A', Subway Shuttle - Franklin Avenue train, and the 'C' trains.
I remember the brand new blue gray subway cars to the 1964-1965 World's Fair and Shea Stadium. The subway fare was 15 cents I was 8 years old way back them
Hi I'm new on US and New York as an international student from Bangladesh. I'd like to add one thing, the area around 73rd St Roosevelt Avenue/Jackson Heights is now filled with Bengali people and stores from Bangladesh. When you get out of 74th St Roosevelt Avenue/Jackson Heights subway, you'll see a lot of shops and food places from Bangladesh across the street. Recently 73rd St has been named Little Bangladesh. If you want to try some delicious food from Bangladesh, you must visit the place!
Honestly whenever I feel homesick and I miss my home, I just go to Jackson Heights and just be in the crowd. Feels really great and really grateful for that!
Also love your channel and content! I'm also been crazy about New York Subway and it's craziness and history haha. And you're channel has been so fun. Amazing content!
I love riding my bike along the 7 and visiting the various ethnic markets.
Also there's a Thai town in Elmhurst. Yes, Queens is a national treasure! Wish I could visit more often.
Great concept of a video!
I wondered where the "22.7 miles" for Line 7's length comes from. Maybe it's all revenue (both local tracks & the express 3rd track east of Queensboro Plaza) track included?
The "as the crow flies" distance from 34th Street Hudson Yards to Flushing Main Street is about 9.0 miles, so the "curve" in LIC would add no more than 1 mile to the Route Length (counting all tracks for the services only once)
"The International Express" Quite the fitting name for the 7 train. You could go from South Asia to East Asia to South-East Asia to South America and more in one shot!
Thank you so much for sharing this information about NYC and the 7 train specifically. 🫶🫡
WTAE WASSUP!! I LOVE YOUR VIDEOS!!!
For restaurants I’ll give my favorite in each neighborhood along the 7, but there are so so so many
1. Flushing - Shanghai you garden (there are so many options lol - spicy palace is good, also flower and dessert is a little pricey but good)
2. East corona - Juquila is an absurdly good Mexican restaurant, highly recommend their mole oaxaqueño - for dessert maybe try Punto Ecuatoriano
3. Elmhurst - urubamba is great for Peruvian food, also great northern Thai food like Ayada and Khao Kang has good Thai desserts
4. Jackson heights - personally my favorite neighborhood esp cause of the open street, there’re the Fuschka food trucks, theres Phayul for Himalayan food - also good momos - like just do a whole Momo run when you get off the 74th st station there are 90 million options (my favorite is Nepali Bhanchha Ghat)
5. Woodside - little Manila, Renee’s is great
6. Sunny side - Rincón melania for Ecuadorian but there are many
7. Long Island city - tbh I consider this more Manhattan/brooklyn nowadays but that isn’t bad! And yes 10 years ago it was SO different but I don’t have a top recommendation… except Terry and yaki the food truck SO GOOD
Great video. As a Queens kid, I will always love my hometown. For more, read the fantastic book; International Express, by Stephane Tonnelat and William Kornblum published in 2017 about the diversity along the line, and also City of Gods by Scott Hanson who writes about all the churches in Flushing. The diversity is wonderful. I worked for NYCTransit for 14 years and the Flushing #7 line is the best-run, most frequent line in the city.
I left LIC in 1998, there was only one tall building, the CitiCorp building. Now it's Skyscraper City.
It's refreshing to hear somebody as bright and bubbly as you, UrbanCaffeine. And you like trains too!!
I lived in NYC until 2005. Looks like ‘much water has flown under the bridge and beyond. LIC is a surprise. I would love to visit NY one day to see all the developments.
Come!!!
The 7 train hits different 😆
NYC has a severe housing shortage. Every single one of those towers going up in LIC is critical for the housing supply. Without a robust increase in the housing supply NYC will continue on its path to becoming a place where only the very rich and very poor live. Without tall buildings the diversity of NYC is in jeopardy and even midrise/low-rise buildings along the 7 train line will become unaffordable.
Thanks for your thoughts! This could be a great video topic.
Amen
Love this video! Sunnyside resident here 🤗
Cool video. I love the 7! I live in Upstate, and when I come down to the City, I keep my hotel costs down by staying in Flushing and riding the 7 across to Manhattan. I love to stop along the way to eat at all the delicious restaurants, and like you said, Flushing Meadows Park is a delightful charm. I love it all!
It's easier to stay in Jersey City and riding the Path train. It's only 1 or 2 stops to the former world trade center.
My favorite story about the 7 is the time I was walking to get some food on main st in flushing, and a kid came out of the subway with his dad and went "wow dad we're in china!!". His dad looked so embarrassed but it was really funny and pretty much sums up how different this part of queens is compared to almost anywhere else in the country. Queens has some of the coolest and most underrated neighborhoods and anyone visiting NYC should 100% check it out.
Also dim sum garden by the flushing lirr 10/10
What I like about the 7 is that it's the only line in IRT to operate in Queens with 11 car sets, and that it's the only line to serve next to a BMT line at a whole station, being Queensboro Plaza.
Thanks for this making useful videos mam ❤
Loved this video! ❤
I don't live in NYC but last time I visited ...some guy that I was walking by in Penn Station randomly asked me if I knew Yiddish! Very informative vlog! Thanks for sharing beautiful lady😘😘😘xox
I heard french a few times while I was at the laundromat in Elmhurst. Though most of Queens speak spanish, I hear Thai in Woodside. Though it’s no surprise that I hear bisaya while at a laundromat located in front of Jollibee. And the laundromat is owned by a cantonese speaking family. My favorite is going to the east end of the 7 Train, and I’m transported to Little Taiwan. West end of the 7 Train is also nice, as it’s the new shiny neighborhood of Hudson Yards and the very calming elevated garden walkway of the High Line.
When I’m at Court Square or Queensboro Plaza, it’s transplants from other states. I have noticed more korean speakers getting on or off the two stations.
It's off the beaten path, but for lunch, we like Cafe Bliss in Sunnyside.
*Jackson Heights has my culture, because I’m South American.*
I honestly took that train 4 times today before watching this lol I took it from end to end twice
As a New Yorker that was born and raised in Queens, the 7 train has always be convenient for me
What about Forest Hills, Kew Gardens, Bayside, Douglaston and Little Neck? These are solidly middle-upper middle and even upper class areas. (This is in reference to your comment on "the rest of Queens.") Not to mention Jamaica Estates.
great video! would you mind adding metric units to your content? 😊 the rest of the world would appreciate it
Queens is cool. I lived in Laurelton. Which is way on the other side though. You'll find all kinds of people living there and mostly West Indian restaurants. If you're into curry goat and oxtail, check out the area. They're only 4 of them but they are all great!
Yes, I like trains, that's why I like your channel, and I am in California
The entire borough of Queens has different cultures of food and restaurants around different neighborhoods. Although I don’t live in Queens but I do take the 7 train sometimes to Flushing-Main Street or get off at Mets-Willest Point when I catch a Mets game. There’s a lot of interesting things that I know about Chinatown and of course my neighborhood used to be mostly Italian but time after time it started to become Bensonhurst Chinatown. I think they are very talented and inspiring people who I had a friend like years ago who was Chinese and Italian. Queens has like Greek culture in Astoria and the list continues. As of having an Italian/Polish heritage I wanna doing many researches on cultural history of any family ancestors.
6:26 you put up a flag of Egypt twice 😂.
National Geographic is probably playing around with the fact that the 7 train passes the United Nations building about a block away
What I've heard is that Manhattan is the Taishanese Chinatown, Flushing is the Mandarin Chinatown, Sunset Park is the Fuzhounese Chinatown, and Bensonhurst is the Cantonese Chinatown
7 Train Is My Favorite Line Espacilly I Go To Flushing
the international express 🚈🗽
Looks like NYC has an interesting mix of cultures and neighbourhoods in each portion of the city. However, in London it is more dispersed and doesn’t really stand out that much. Still multiple languages are spoken here too.
Go to cute cat cafe near Fresh Pond Rd on the M train. It’s not the 7, but they’re connected!
You should do one of these for the (2)
Huh?
I love the beautiful glass high rises and their density, don't relate to all the dislike from urbanists
Diversity is the new University!👌🎓
Hi! Coming to NY in August. In some of your metro card videos, you mention the payment system being revamped and that the metro card could change in 2023. Has that happened yet? THANK YOU for the vids! #subwaysuperhero
No, it hasn't. You can use a MetroCard or pay directly with a credit card or phone.
7 train has 11 Cars
Ah, the 7 train. The International Express.
"Just below over?"
I love LIC and this is a perfect example of how gentrification could be good :p
...And if one happens to be taking the 7 Train to Flushing on the way to a Mets baseball game, be prepared to hear big league conversations in Spanish and Japanese as well as English, French (français) and a whole lot of 300-way trash talking about tennis. 🤣😂
I disagree the main languages spoken in the US it is two - English and Spanish.
The sir line is the least culture-diverse line.
You forgot Rego Park with Ukrainian and Russian community!
That means I’m Hispanic. \
👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👍🙂
La bestia
My mom speaks Chinese!
If you're up for it, try vegan option at Dosa Delight at 37 Av/73 St and it's very good food.
Why travel the world when you can just ride the 7 Train.. 🚇 #InternationalExpress #NYC