

Update: "Immersive Van Gogh" is reopening November 17 and will run through January 2, 2022. In addition, a tree will also be planted for every ticket sold, making it a perfect gift for your eco-conscious friends! While it’s easy to get overwhelmed by the enormity of it all, that’s not the point, and each installation contains a placard with tips for what you can do to help on a daily basis. This exhibit will not only leave visitors in awe, but it will help support Oceanic Global, an organization devoted to raising awareness around our aquatic ecosystems. Each installation makes you confront the damage that we are doing to our planet on a daily basis. Each of the rooms has been created to highlight a specific challenge facing our environment-challenges including overfishing, plastic pollution, food waste, deforestation and climate change.

Experiential artist Valentino Vettori is the brain behind the design that includes human scale art installations, many of them making use of augmented and virtual reality, overpower your senses, and force you to contemplate the subject matter. Immersive art exhibit Arcadia Earth has reopened after being closed due to the pandemic, and it looks better than ever! The exhibit aims to inspire visitors artistically and ethically, as it uses 15 rooms to spotlight the environmental challenges that our planet is facing (such as overfishing, food waste, and climate change). The sun in the morning will cast a different light than the sun in the evening. When it's stormy, you'll see the rain fly sideways and around the building. When the weather is nice, it'll look like you're walking among the clouds. One of the coolest parts of the experience, besides the absolutely breathtaking view of the city (where you can see all the major landmarks and bridges), is that it changes with the weather and time of day. Looking above you and below you in this two-story space, you see your reflection repeating forever. Kenzo Digital has created a totally mirrored infinity room called "Air" that reflects the sky and city views over and over, making you feel like you're walking in the sky or on another plane of existence. After a trip through a mirrored hallway with its own immersive elements, visitors take an elevator up to the 91st floor, where they're 1,000 feet over the streets and sidewalks of NYC. As the city's fourth-tallest building after One World Trade Center, Central Park Tower and 111 West 57th Street, it sits just west of Grand Central Terminal, where you first enter the experience underground. Summit One Vanderbilt sits atop the new 67-floor One Vanderbilt super-tall-a 1,401-foot-high-skyscraper.

A heart-pounding experience in the sky is unlike any other experience atop a skyscraper.
