- Accessibility URL: http://www.mocanyc.org/visit/accessibility
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Days Closed:
- Mon
- Direct Ticketing Link: http://my.mocanyc.org/
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Kid Friendly:
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Multilingual Staff:
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Senior Citizen Discounts:
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WiFi - Free:
- Assisted Listening System: No
- Braille: Yes
- Large Print: Yes
- Open Captioned and/or Closed Captioned: Yes
- Sign Language Interpretation: Yes
- TTY (hotels only): No
- Volume Control Telephone (hotels only): No
- Wheelchair Accessible: Yes
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Restaurant Features:
- Off-Premises Catering
- # of Private Rooms: 4
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Audio/Visual Services:
- Banquet Capacity: 40-80
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Catering - Outside Permitted:
- Classroom Capacity: 60-100
- Reception Capacity: 200-250
- Theater Capacity: 60-100
- Max Group Size: N/A - NOT DEST. SVCS.
- Suggested Admission: General admission: $10; seniors/students: $5; kids under 12: free; MOCA Members: free.
- Pay What you Wish: Free gallery admission first Thursday of each month except on Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Years

- 215 Centre St. (Howard–Grand Sts.)
- NYC, 10013
This expansive museum in Chinatown, which recently reopened in a new location, uses oral histories, video, photographs and written documents to bring to life the experiences of this vibrant immigrant community. The museum’s dramatic new home, designed by acclaimed architect Maya Lin—who created the Vietnam Veterans Memorial—features bronze walls, reclaimed wood floors and a "journey wall" that describes the route each donor's family took to the United States.
- 215 Centre St. (Howard–Grand Sts.)
- NYC, 10013

This expansive museum in Chinatown, which recently reopened in a new location, uses oral histories, video, photographs and written documents to bring to life the experiences of this vibrant immigrant community. The museum’s dramatic new home, designed by acclaimed architect Maya Lin—who created the Vietnam Veterans Memorial—features bronze walls, reclaimed wood floors and a "journey wall" that describes the route each donor's family took to the United States.
