Landmark name
Image
Date listed[ b] [ c]
Location[ c]
Neighborhood
Description
35-34 Bell Boulevard
35-34 Bell Boulevard 40°44′44″N 73°51′37″W / 40.745694°N 73.860167°W / 40.745694; -73.860167
Bayside
Colonial Revival house built in 1905–1906 with a distinctive cobblestone facade.[ 15]
53rd (now 101st) Precinct Police Station
53rd (now 101st) Precinct Police Station
16-12 Mott Avenue 40°36′11″N 73°45′00″W / 40.60295°N 73.75000°W / 40.60295; -73.75000 (53rd (now 101st) Precinct Police Station )
Far Rockaway
First police station in the Rockaways built by the New York City government, erected 1927–1928 in the Renaissance Revival and Colonial Revival styles.[ 16]
Adrian and Ann Wyckoff Onderdonk House
Adrian and Ann Wyckoff Onderdonk House
18-20 Flushing Avenue 40°42′40″N 73°55′12″W / 40.711111°N 73.920001°W / 40.711111; -73.920001 (Adrian and Ann Wyckoff Onderdonk House )
Ridgewood
One of a few remaining 18th-century stone houses with gambrel roofs in New York City.[ 17]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places[ 18]
Allen-Beville House (Benjamin P. Allen House)
Allen-Beville House (Benjamin P. Allen House)
29 Center Drive 40°46′22″N 73°45′03″W / 40.772778°N 73.750833°W / 40.772778; -73.750833 (Allen-Beville House (Benjamin P. Allen House) )
Douglaston
One of Douglaston's oldest homes, built in 1848–1850 in the Greek Revival style.[ 19]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places,[ 18] and overlaid by the Douglaston Historic District
Louis Armstrong House
34-56 107th Street 40°45′16″N 73°51′42″W / 40.75446°N 73.86161°W / 40.75446; -73.86161
Corona
Former home of musician Louis Armstrong , a brick-covered frame structure erected in 1910.[ 20]
Astoria Park Pool and Play Center
Astoria Park Pool and Play Center
19th Street between 22nd Drive and Hoyt Avenue North 40°46′44″N 73°55′21″W / 40.7789°N 73.9226°W / 40.7789; -73.9226 (Astoria Park Pool and Play Center )
Astoria
One of several Works Progress Administration recreation centers, built in 1936.[ 21]
Bank of Manhattan Company Building aka Long Island City Clocktower
Bank of Manhattan Company Building aka Long Island City Clocktower
29-27 41st Avenue 40°45′00″N 73°56′11″W / 40.75005°N 73.93632°W / 40.75005; -73.93632 (Bank of Manhattan Company Building aka Long Island City Clocktower )
Long Island City
Queens' first skyscraper, a neo-Gothic clock tower built in 1927 by the Manhattan Company .[ 22]
Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, Lodge Number 878
82-10 Queens Boulevard 40°44′14″N 73°52′52″W / 40.73711°N 73.88108°W / 40.73711; -73.88108
Elmhurst
Italian Renaissance Palazzo Elks lodge built in 1923–1924.[ 23]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places[ 18]
John Bowne House
37-01 Bowne Street 40°45′46″N 73°49′30″W / 40.762894°N 73.824948°W / 40.762894; -73.824948
Flushing
Oldest house in Queens, an English Colonial house built in 1661. It was home to John Bowne and nine generations of his family.[ 24]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places[ 18]
Bowne Street Community Church
Bowne Street Community Church
143-11 Roosevelt Avenue 40°45′41″N 73°49′26″W / 40.76147°N 73.824°W / 40.76147; -73.824 (Bowne Street Community Church )
Flushing
Romanesque Revival church built in 1891–1892 in Flushing, an early center of religious tolerance.[ 25]
Brinckerhoff Cemetery
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69-71 182nd Street 40°43′55″N 73°47′18″W / 40.73204°N 73.78825°W / 40.73204; -73.78825
Fresh Meadows
One of Queens' oldest colonial cemeteries, dating from 1730.[ 26]
Ralph Johnson Bunche House
115-24 Grosvenor Road 40°42′23″N 73°50′13″W / 40.706389°N 73.836944°W / 40.706389; -73.836944
Kew Gardens
Former home of diplomat Ralph Bunche , a neo-Tudor house built in 1927.[ 27]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places as a National Historic Landmark[ 18]
Congregation Tifereth Israel
Congregation Tifereth Israel
109-18 54th Avenue 40°44′32″N 73°51′11″W / 40.7422°N 73.853°W / 40.7422; -73.853 (Congregation Tifereth Israel )
Corona
A Gothic and Moorish synagogue built in 1911.[ 28]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places[ 18]
Richard Cornell Graveyard
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1457 Greenport Road 40°36′01″N 73°44′59″W / 40.60028°N 73.74972°W / 40.60028; -73.74972 (Richard Cornell Graveyard )
Far Rockaway
One of New York City's surviving 18th-century cemeteries. Private burial ground of the Cornell family in the 18th and 19th centuries.[ 29]
Creedmoor (Cornell) Farmhouse
Creedmoor (Cornell) Farmhouse
73-50 Little Neck Parkway 40°44′54″N 73°43′13″W / 40.74833°N 73.72028°W / 40.74833; -73.72028 (Creedmoor (Cornell) Farmhouse )
Bellerose
Colonial farmhouse built in 1772, and operated as part of the Queens County Farm Museum .[ 30]
Daniel and Abbie B. Eldridge House
87-61 111th Street 40°41′43″N 73°50′10″W / 40.69528°N 73.83611°W / 40.69528; -73.83611
Richmond Hill
Italianate-style villa built in 1870 as one of the first developments in the Richmond Hill area.[ 31]
Firehouse, Engine Company 258, Hook and Ladder Company 115
10-40 47th Avenue 40°44′42″N 73°57′06″W / 40.745083°N 73.95167°W / 40.745083; -73.95167
Long Island City
Renaissance Revival firehouse built in 1902–1904.[ 32]
Firehouse, Engine Companies 264 and 328, Ladder Company 134
16-15 Central Avenue 40°36′16″N 73°45′08″W / 40.60455°N 73.75234°W / 40.60455; -73.75234
Far Rockaway
Renaissance Revival and Colonial Revival firehouse built in 1910–1912.[ 33]
Firehouse, Engine Company 268, Ladder Company 137
259 Beach 116th Street 40°34′51″N 73°50′18″W / 40.58084°N 73.83824°W / 40.58084; -73.83824
Rockaway Park
Colonial Revival firehouse built in 1912–1913.[ 34]
Firehouse, Engine Company 289, Ladder Company 138
97-28 43rd Avenue 40°44′47″N 73°51′55″W / 40.746250°N 73.86528°W / 40.746250; -73.86528
Corona
Neoclassical firehouse built in 1912–1914.[ 35]
Firehouse, Engine Company 305
111-02 Queens Boulevard 40°43′06″N 73°50′16″W / 40.71821°N 73.83774°W / 40.71821; -73.83774
Forest Hills
Neo-Medieval firehouse built in 1912–1914.[ 35]
First Reformed Church of Jamaica
First Reformed Church of Jamaica
153-10 Jamaica Avenue 40°42′09″N 73°48′08″W / 40.7025°N 73.802222°W / 40.7025; -73.802222 (First Reformed Church of Jamaica )
Jamaica
Romanesque Revival church built in 1858–1859.[ 36]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places[ 18]
Fitzgerald/Ginsberg Mansion
September 20, 2005 (#2160 )
145-15 Bayside Avenue 40°46′16″N 73°49′24″W / 40.77103°N 73.82322°W / 40.77103; -73.82322
Linden Hill
Tudor Revival mansion built in 1924 for Charles and Florence Fitzgerald, then occupied by Ethel and Morris Ginsberg.[ 37]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places[ 18]
Flushing High School
35-01 Union Street 40°45′54″N 73°49′39″W / 40.765°N 73.8275°W / 40.765; -73.8275
Flushing
New York City's oldest high school, designed in the Collegiate Gothic style and built in 1912–1915.[ 38]
Flushing Municipal Courthouse/Flushing Town Hall
Flushing Municipal Courthouse/Flushing Town Hall
137-35 Northern Boulevard 40°45′50″N 73°49′49″W / 40.763889°N 73.830278°W / 40.763889; -73.830278 (Flushing Municipal Courthouse/Flushing Town Hall )
Flushing
Romanesque Revival courthouse and town hall built in 1862.[ 39]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places[ 18]
Forest Park Carousel
Forest Park 40°42′01″N 73°51′24″W / 40.70038°N 73.85673°W / 40.70038; -73.85673
Woodhaven
Carousel with 52 figures, most carved by Daniel Muller from 1903 to 1909.[ 40]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places[ 18]
Fort Totten Battery
September 24, 1974 (#0826 )
Fort Totten Park 40°47′48″N 73°46′46″W / 40.79661°N 73.77936°W / 40.79661; -73.77936
Fort Totten
Fortification built between 1817 and 1864 as part of the Third System of fortifications[ 41]
Overlaid by the Fort Totten Historic District
Fort Totten Officers' Club
September 24, 1974 (#0827 )
Fort Totten Park 40°47′32″N 73°46′41″W / 40.792222°N 73.778056°W / 40.792222; -73.778056
Fort Totten
Gothic Revival castellated structure built in 1870, one of a few such designs in New York City.[ 42]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places,[ 18] and overlaid by the Fort Totten Historic District
Friends Meeting House
Friends Meeting House
137-16 Northern Boulevard 40°45′47″N 73°49′49″W / 40.763028°N 73.830361°W / 40.763028; -73.830361 (Friends Meeting House )
Flushing
New York City's oldest surviving house of worship, built in 1694.[ 43]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places as a National Historic Landmark[ 18]
John Birks "Dizzy" Gillespie Residence
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105-19 37th Avenue 40°45′15″N 73°51′44″W / 40.7541°N 73.8623°W / 40.7541; -73.8623 (John Birks "Dizzy" Gillespie Residence )
Corona
Multi-family home that was Dizzy Gillespie 's residence for 12 years.[ 44]
Grace Episcopal Church and Graveyard
Grace Episcopal Church and Graveyard
155-03 Jamaica Avenue 40°42′13″N 73°48′04″W / 40.70358°N 73.80105°W / 40.70358; -73.80105 (Grace Episcopal Church and Graveyard )
Jamaica
Gothic Revival church built in 1861–1862, with one of New York City's oldest graveyards.[ 45]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places[ 18]
Arthur Hammerstein House
168-11 Powells Cove Boulevard 40°47′37″N 73°50′24″W / 40.79371°N 73.84001°W / 40.79371; -73.84001
Whitestone
Former home of producer Arthur Hammerstein , a neo-Tudor house built in 1924.[ 46]
Hawthorne Court Apartments
215-37 to 215-43 43rd Avenue and 42-22 to 42-38 216th Street 40°45′44″N 73°45′59″W / 40.76222°N 73.76639°W / 40.76222; -73.76639
Bayside
Tudor Revival apartment complex built in 1930–1931.[ 47]
Jamaica Chamber of Commerce Building
89-31 161st Street 40°42′20″N 73°47′57″W / 40.70555°N 73.79925°W / 40.70555; -73.79925
Jamaica
Georgian Revival office building constructed in 1928–1929.[ 48]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places[ 18]
Jamaica High School/Jamaica Educational Campus
Jamaica High School/Jamaica Educational Campus
167-01 Gothic Drive 40°42′51″N 73°47′53″W / 40.71416°N 73.79797°W / 40.71416; -73.79797 (Jamaica High School/Jamaica Educational Campus )
Jamaica Estates
Gothic Revival structure built in 1925–1927 to replace the old Jamaica High School building on Hillside Avenue.[ 49]
Jamaica High School/Jamaica Learning Center
Jamaica High School/Jamaica Learning Center
162-02 Hillside Avenue 40°42′30″N 73°47′59″W / 40.70828°N 73.79959°W / 40.70828; -73.79959 (Jamaica High School/Jamaica Learning Center )
Jamaica
Dutch Revival structure built in 1895–1896.[ 50]
Jamaica Savings Bank, Jamaica Avenue
Jamaica Savings Bank, Jamaica Avenue
161-02 Jamaica Avenue 40°42′13″N 73°47′55″W / 40.70358°N 73.79851°W / 40.70358; -73.79851 (Jamaica Savings Bank, Jamaica Avenue )
Jamaica
Beaux-Arts building constructed in 1897–1898.[ 51]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places[ 18]
Jamaica Savings Bank, Sutphin Boulevard
Jamaica Savings Bank, Sutphin Boulevard
146-21 Jamaica Avenue 40°42′07″N 73°48′29″W / 40.70194°N 73.808194°W / 40.70194; -73.808194 (Jamaica Savings Bank, Sutphin Boulevard )
Jamaica
Moderne bank built in 1939.[ 52]
King Manor
150th Street and Jamaica Avenue 40°42′11″N 73°48′14″W / 40.703056°N 73.803889°W / 40.703056; -73.803889
Jamaica
Residence of Founding Father Rufus King , one of Queens' few remaining 18th Century American Colonial houses.[ 53]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places as a National Historic Landmark[ 18]
Kingsland Homestead
143-35 37th Avenue 40°45′49″N 73°49′27″W / 40.763611°N 73.824167°W / 40.763611; -73.824167
Flushing
Second oldest house in Flushing, a Dutch Colonial house built in 1774.[ 54]
This building was originally designated as a landmark with the address 40-25 155th Street. The designation was amended on June 30, 2020, to also include the grounds of the property.[ 55]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places[ 18]
J. Kurtz and Sons Store Building
162-24 Jamaica Avenue 40°42′15″N 73°47′49″W / 40.70428°N 73.79705°W / 40.70428; -73.79705
Jamaica
Art Deco store built in 1931.[ 56]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places[ 18]
La Casina
90-33 160th Street 40°42′16″N 73°47′58″W / 40.70432°N 73.79931°W / 40.70432; -73.79931
Jamaica
Streamlined Moderne building erected in 1933.[ 57]
Lewis H. Latimer House
34-41 137th Street 40°45′58″N 73°49′46″W / 40.766063°N 73.829402°W / 40.766063; -73.829402
Flushing
Former home of inventor Lewis H. Latimer , a Queen Anne style frame house built in 1887–1889.[ 58]
Lawrence Cemetery
216th Street and 42nd Avenue 40°45′48″N 73°46′01″W / 40.76333°N 73.76683°W / 40.76333; -73.76683
Bayside
Cemetery with 40–50 graves for the Lawrence family, interred between 1832 and 1925.[ 59]
Lawrence Family Graveyard
20th Road and 35th Street 40°46′38″N 73°54′20″W / 40.77735°N 73.90563°W / 40.77735; -73.90563
Steinway
Cemetery with 89 graves for the Lawrence family.[ 60]
Lent-Riker-Smith Homestead
Lent-Riker-Smith Homestead
78-03 19th Road 40°46′23″N 73°53′31″W / 40.773056°N 73.891944°W / 40.773056; -73.891944 (Lent-Riker-Smith Homestead )
Ditmars
New York City's oldest remaining private house used for such purposes. Built in 1729 as a Dutch Colonial farmhouse.[ 61]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places[ 18]
Loew's Valencia Theatre
165-11 Jamaica Avenue 40°42′21″N 73°47′40″W / 40.70583°N 73.79444°W / 40.70583; -73.79444
Jamaica
Baroque theater constructed in 1928 as part of the Loew's Wonder Theatres chain.[ 62]
Lydia Ann Bell and William Ahles House
39-24 213th Street 40°45′51″N 73°46′25″W / 40.76408°N 73.77350°W / 40.76408; -73.77350
Bayside
Second Empire Style house built in 1873 with Colonial Revival alterations in 1924. It is Bayside's only remaining Second Empire house of the 1870s and 1880s.[ 63]
Marine Air Terminal
La Guardia Airport 40°46′25″N 73°53′10″W / 40.773611°N 73.886111°W / 40.773611; -73.886111
East Elmhurst
Art Deco airport terminal built in 1939–1940, only active airport terminal dating from the first generation of passenger air travel in the United States.[ 64]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places[ 18]
Moore-Jackson Cemetery
31-34 54th Street 40°45′22″N 73°54′28″W / 40.75601°N 73.90770°W / 40.75601; -73.90770
Woodside
Cemetery with at least 51 interments from 1733 to 1868. One of New York City's few surviving Colonial-era cemeteries.[ 65]
Newtown High School
Newtown High School
48-01 90th Street 40°44′27″N 73°52′27″W / 40.740829°N 73.874168°W / 40.740829; -73.874168 (Newtown High School )
Elmhurst
Flemish Renaissance Revival style high school building erected in 1917–1921, with a turreted tower. The designation also includes expansions in 1930–1931 and 1956–1958.[ 66]
New York Architectural Terra Cotta Works Building
42-10 Vernon Boulevard 40°45′14″N 73°56′59″W / 40.754000°N 73.949778°W / 40.754000; -73.949778
Long Island City
Renaissance and Tudor Revival building constructed in 1892 as the headquarters of the New York Architectural Terra-Cotta Company , the city's sole architectural terracotta manufacturer.[ 67]
New York State Supreme Court, Queens County, Long Island City Branch
New York State Supreme Court, Queens County, Long Island City Branch
25-10 Court Square 40°44′45″N 73°56′35″W / 40.74591°N 73.94301°W / 40.74591; -73.94301 (New York State Supreme Court, Queens County, Long Island City Branch )
Long Island City
English Renaissance Revival courthouse dating from 1872–1876, and rebuilt in 1904–1908.[ 68]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places[ 18]
Old Saint James Episcopal Church
Old Saint James Episcopal Church
September 19, 2017 (#2593 )
86-02 Broadway 40°44′18″N 73°52′40″W / 40.738333°N 73.877778°W / 40.738333; -73.877778 (Old Saint James Episcopal Church )
Elmhurst
Colonial-era church dating from 1735–1736.[ 69]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places[ 18]
Paramount Studios, Building No. 1 (Main Building)
Paramount Studios, Building No. 1 (Main Building)
35-11 35th Avenue 40°45′25″N 73°55′28″W / 40.75696°N 73.92451°W / 40.75696; -73.92451 (Paramount Studios, Building No. 1 (Main Building) )
Astoria
Concrete motion-picture studio built in 1920–1921.[ 70]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places[ 18]
Pepsi-Cola Sign
Pepsi-Cola Sign
4-09 47th Road 40°44′51″N 73°57′28″W / 40.7475°N 73.957778°W / 40.7475; -73.957778 (Pepsi-Cola Sign )
Long Island City
Electric sign that once advertised Pepsi-Cola's Long Island City bottling facility.[ 71]
Poppenhusen Institute
114-04 14th Road 40°47′04″N 73°51′12″W / 40.784444°N 73.853333°W / 40.784444; -73.853333
College Point
Italianate and French Second Empire building that served as a village hall, library, and jail.[ 72]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places[ 18]
Prospect Cemetery
Prospect Cemetery
159th Street and Beaver Road 40°42′04″N 73°48′01″W / 40.701111°N 73.800278°W / 40.701111; -73.800278 (Prospect Cemetery )
Jamaica
Oldest graveyard in Jamaica, dating from 1665–1670.[ 73]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places[ 18]
Public School 48
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September 21, 2020 (#2646 )
155-02 108th Avenue 40°41′37″N 73°47′46″W / 40.6936112°N 73.796125°W / 40.6936112; -73.796125 (Public School 48 )
South Jamaica
Art Deco school designed in 1932.
Public School 66
Public School 66
85-11 102nd Street 40°41′52″N 73°50′47″W / 40.697778°N 73.846389°W / 40.697778; -73.846389 (Public School 66 )
Richmond Hill
Victorian Eclectic, Romanesque Revival, and Queen Anne school built in 1898.[ 74]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places[ 18]
Queens Borough Public Library, Poppenhusen Branch
Queens Borough Public Library, Poppenhusen Branch
121-23 14th Avenue 40°47′10″N 73°50′46″W / 40.78623°N 73.84601°W / 40.78623; -73.84601 (Queens Borough Public Library, Poppenhusen Branch )
College Point
Classical-inspired Carnegie library built in 1904, part of the Queens Public Library system.[ 75]
Queens General Court House
88-11 Sutphin Boulevard 40°42′16″N 73°48′30″W / 40.70446°N 73.80844°W / 40.70446; -73.80844
Jamaica
Modern Classical courthouse constructed in 1936–1939.[ 76]
Queensboro Bridge
Spanning the East River between Queens Plaza, Queens, and East 59th Street, Manhattan 40°45′20″N 73°57′05″W / 40.75549°N 73.95132°W / 40.75549; -73.95132
Long Island City
Double-decked cantilever bridge to Manhattan , completed in 1909, which helped influence the development of Queens.[ 77]
Reformed Dutch Church of Newtown and Fellowship Hall
Reformed Dutch Church of Newtown and Fellowship Hall
85-15 Broadway 40°44′21″N 73°52′39″W / 40.73929°N 73.87745°W / 40.73929; -73.87745 (Reformed Dutch Church of Newtown and Fellowship Hall )
Elmhurst
One of New York City's few remaining churches made entirely of wood, built in 1831.[ 78]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places[ 18]
The Register/Jamaica Arts Center
The Register/Jamaica Arts Center
161-04 Jamaica Avenue 40°42′14″N 73°47′53″W / 40.70375°N 73.79816°W / 40.70375; -73.79816 (The Register/Jamaica Arts Center )
Jamaica
Neo-Italian Renaissance building that formerly housed the Queens Register of Titles and Deeds.[ 79]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places[ 18]
Remsen Cemetery
near 69-43 Trotting Course Lane 40°42′44″N 73°51′31″W / 40.71234°N 73.85853°W / 40.71234; -73.85853
Rego Park
Private cemetery dating from 1785–1795.[ 80]
Richmond Hill Republican Club
86-15 Lefferts Boulevard 40°42′03″N 73°49′52″W / 40.70083°N 73.83111°W / 40.70083; -73.83111
Richmond Hill
Colonial Revival clubhouse of the Republican Party , built in 1908.[ 81]
Ridgewood Savings Bank, Forest Hills Branch
Ridgewood Savings Bank, Forest Hills Branch
107-55 Queens Boulevard 40°43′19″N 73°50′39″W / 40.72203°N 73.84425°W / 40.72203; -73.84425 (Ridgewood Savings Bank, Forest Hills Branch )
Forest Hills
First branch of Ridgewood Savings Bank , built in 1939–1940 in the Modern Classical style.[ 82]
Ridgewood Theatre Building
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55-27 Myrtle Avenue 40°42′01″N 73°54′27″W / 40.700139°N 73.90750°W / 40.700139; -73.90750
Ridgewood
Beaux-Arts theater built in 1916.[ 83]
Edward E. Sanford House
Edward E. Sanford House
102-45 47th Avenue 40°44′44″N 73°51′37″W / 40.745694°N 73.860167°W / 40.745694; -73.860167 (Edward E. Sanford House )
Corona
Italianate house built circa 1871.[ 84]
Herman A. and Malvina Schleicher House
11-41 123rd Street 40°47′12″N 73°50′41″W / 40.78679°N 73.84484°W / 40.78679; -73.84484
College Point
Italianate and French Second Empire mansion built in 1857, and one of New York City's first buildings with mansard roofs .[ 85]
St. George's Church
St. George's Church
38-02 Main Street 40°45′37″N 73°49′52″W / 40.760278°N 73.831111°W / 40.760278; -73.831111 (St. George's Church )
Flushing
Gorthic Revival church built in 1853–1854.[ 86]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places as a National Historic Landmark[ 18]
St. Monica's Church
St. Monica's Church
94-20 160th Street 40°42′07″N 73°47′53″W / 40.701944°N 73.798056°W / 40.701944; -73.798056 (St. Monica's Church )
Jamaica
Romanesque church built in 1856 with a central entrance tower.[ 87]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places[ 18]
Sidewalk Clock, 161-11 Jamaica Avenue
Sidewalk Clock, 161-11 Jamaica Avenue
92-00a Union Hall Street 40°42′15″N 73°47′53″W / 40.704167°N 73.798056°W / 40.704167; -73.798056 (Sidewalk Clock, 161-11 Jamaica Avenue )
Jamaica
Classical cast-iron clock made circa 1900.[ 88]
This building was originally designated as a landmark with the address 161-11 Jamaica Avenue. In 1989, it was moved across the street.
Also on the National Register of Historic Places[ 18]
Sidewalk Clock, 30-78 Steinway Street
Sidewalk Clock, 30-78 Steinway Street
30-78 Steinway Street 40°45′43″N 73°55′00″W / 40.76191°N 73.91669°W / 40.76191; -73.91669 (Sidewalk Clock, 30-78 Steinway Street )
Astoria
Classical cast-iron clock made circa 1922 for Edward Wagner, owner of the Wagners Jewelers store.[ 89]
Sohmer and Company Piano Factory
31-01 Vernon Boulevard 40°46′10″N 73°56′07″W / 40.769444°N 73.935278°W / 40.769444; -73.935278
Astoria
German Romanesque Revival factory for Sohmer & Co. , built in 1886.[ 90]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places[ 18]
Steinway Mansion/Benjamin T. Pike House
Steinway Mansion/Benjamin T. Pike House
18-33 41st Street 40°46′44″N 73°53′49″W / 40.77875°N 73.897083°W / 40.77875; -73.897083 (Steinway Mansion/Benjamin T. Pike House )
Steinway
Residence of piano maker William Steinway , an Italianate villa built circa 1858.[ 91]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places[ 18]
Suffolk Title and Guarantee Company Building
90-04 161st Street 40°42′19″N 73°47′59″W / 40.70518°N 73.79965°W / 40.70518; -73.79965
Jamaica
Art Deco building erected in 1929.[ 92]
Trans World Airlines Flight Center/TWA Terminal A
Trans World Airlines Flight Center/TWA Terminal A
John F. Kennedy International Airport 40°38′45″N 73°46′39″W / 40.645833°N 73.7775°W / 40.645833; -73.7775 (Trans World Airlines Flight Center/TWA Terminal A )
Jamaica
Concrete and glass terminal built for Trans World Airlines between 1956 and 1962.[ 93]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places[ 18]
Unisphere and Reflecting Pool
Unisphere and Reflecting Pool
Inside Flushing Meadows–Corona Park 40°44′47″N 73°50′41″W / 40.746426°N 73.844819°W / 40.746426; -73.844819 (Unisphere and Reflecting Pool )
Flushing Meadows–Corona Park
Steel globe built as an icon of the 1964 New York World's Fair .[ 94]
Cornelius Van Wyck House
37-04 Douglaston Parkway 40°46′24″N 73°45′09″W / 40.773278°N 73.7525°W / 40.773278; -73.7525
Douglaston
Dutch Colonial house built in 1735, one of New York City's few remaining Dutch Colonial houses.[ 95]
Also on the National Register of Historic Places,[ 18] and overlaid by the Douglaston Historic District
Voelker Orth Museum Bird Sanctuary and Victorian Garden
Voelker Orth Museum Bird Sanctuary and Victorian Garden
149-19 38th Avenue 40°45′53″N 73°48′58″W / 40.764618°N 73.816114°W / 40.764618; -73.816114 (Voelker Orth Museum Bird Sanctuary and Victorian Garden )
Murray Hill
One of a few remaining houses from Flushing's first major suburban developments, built in 1891 for businessman Conrad Voelker.[ 96]
Weeping Beech
Weeping Beech
Weeping Beech Park, 37th Avenue between Parsons Boulevard and Bowne Street 40°45′49″N 73°49′27″W / 40.763611°N 73.824167°W / 40.763611; -73.824167 (Weeping Beech )
Flushing
Weeping beech planted by Samuel Parsons in 1847;[ 97] the original tree was euthanized in 1999.[ 98]