<p>If you want to check out the neighborhood a bit more extensively and you cannot make it to NYC for a visit or did not have time to really explore morning side, I recommend checking out google street view, if you have not already done so. Great way to pretty much “walk” through Morningside heights and see the shops and general architecture. If you don’t know how to access it, type in columbia university in google maps. You should see a small animated orange person in the left region of the window. Drag him to Morningside heights and voila, you have panoramas of every ten feet in morning side heights, and for that matter in virtually every major city in the world.</p>
<p>By the way, on a different note, as many of the posters mentioned the area around morning side is rapidly gentrifying. What was long thought to be one of the more dangerous areas close to Columbia’s campus is the Manhattanville district to the north - the same place that columbia is building its brand new 7 million square foot campus. Once that really gets underway, which it is sure to do because of the recent court ruling in Columbia’s favor, you’ll see the areas around Manhattanville become even more safe than they already are and have an abundance of retail in addition to the stretch along broadway between 122nd and 125th streets. Also, a great place to check out in Morningside Heights is right by there: The peaceful street right by the international house and adjacent to Sakura park (a really gorgeous place) called Claremont Avenue. It runs parallel to Broadway and starts on the south side of Barnard’s campus and extends north only about five or six blocks. When you’re there, check out the new Harlem riverside park, which as far as I’ve heard, has free kayaks to use too.</p>
<p>In terms of Morningside Heights safety, it is considered the second safest neighborhood in the safest large city in the U.S. If you would like further reassurance check out this link that shows Columbia is safer than Penn, Yale, and Harvard. And yes, you got me, it is not as safe as bucolic Dartmouth or Cornell… [Crime</a> Statistics at the Ivies > Brown, Columbia, Cornell, crime, Dartmouth, Harvard, Penn, Princeton, Yale | IvyGate](<a href=“http://www.ivygateblog.com/2006/08/crime-statistics-at-the-ivies/]Crime”>http://www.ivygateblog.com/2006/08/crime-statistics-at-the-ivies/)</p>
<p>In addition, while most marvel at Columbia’s campus, many note the lack of open green space. Yet, the plethora of vacant green space in Morningside from Saint John’s Cathedral’s grounds to Sakura, Riverside, and Morningside parks easily make up for it.</p>
<p>I realize this is quite a long post and I apologize for that, but I also recommend putting this in perspective: Columbia’s immediate neighborhood may not have the hustle and bustle of some NYC districts such as Greenwich Village (where NYU is) or Midtown, but in fact, that may be one of its greatest advantages. As many users have said, it’s so nice to have an oasis away from all of those crowds and noise once in a while, to be able to venture into sleepy riverside simply enjoy the fresh air and breeze. Or gaze from Sakura Park at the abutting Gothic glories that are the Union Theological Seminary and Riverside Church (the tallest chapel in the whole of the United States at 392ft - nearly twice the height of Yale’s “eminent” 216ft Harkness Tower). That’s not to say that Broadway is not a happening place between 110th and 116th, because it is. Same goes to Amsterdam Avenue near St. Johns Cathedral (111th street) and between 120th and 122nd streets. To reiterate, think about it… It CAN be nice to have a more low key neighborhood like Morningside to fall back on. The city is great, I’ve lived there and San Francisco for quite some time, but for anyone, even the most devout urbanites, it can be overwhelming at one time or another. All in all, I can safely say that I would have Columbia nowhere else…</p>