Step into the syncopated past of Manhattan’s West Side on this guided walking tour of Lincoln Centre and the lost area of San Juan Hill. Once a vibrant, multiracial community alive with jazz clubs, tenements, churches, and street life, San Juan Hill helped shape the sound and soul of New York before being erased in the name of progress. We trace the rhythms of migration, creativity, and everyday life that once filled these blocks—listening for what still echoes beneath the marble and plazas.
The tour visits the last surviving buildings of the area, striking murals, and key sites across Lincoln Center’s campus, uncovering the layered histories of the structures and open spaces that replaced an entire community. Along the way, we examine the forces of urban renewal and the decisive vision that reshaped the city, asking who benefited, who was displaced, and what was lost—including how San Juan Hill was transformed in the popular imagination as the backdrop for West Side Story, a cultural echo of a area already disappearing. We also look at current efforts to reckon with this history, including new plans and community-centered initiatives aimed at restoring access, memory, and justice to the landscape. This is a walk through ambition and aftermath, improvisation and erasure—where jazz met the blueprint, and the city was forever changed.