| Date | Sunrise | Sunset | Day length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 July 2026, Wednesday | 5:28 AM | 8:30 PM | 15h 02m |
| 2 July 2026, Thursday | 5:29 AM | 8:30 PM | 15h 01m |
| 3 July 2026, Friday | 5:29 AM | 8:30 PM | 15h 00m |
| 4 July 2026, Saturday | 5:30 AM | 8:30 PM | 14h 59m |
| 5 July 2026, Sunday | 5:30 AM | 8:30 PM | 14h 59m |
| 6 July 2026, Monday | 5:31 AM | 8:29 PM | 14h 58m |
| 7 July 2026, Tuesday | 5:32 AM | 8:29 PM | 14h 57m |
| 8 July 2026, Wednesday | 5:32 AM | 8:29 PM | 14h 56m |
| 9 July 2026, Thursday | 5:33 AM | 8:28 PM | 14h 55m |
| 10 July 2026, Friday | 5:34 AM | 8:28 PM | 14h 54m |
| 11 July 2026, Saturday | 5:34 AM | 8:27 PM | 14h 52m |
| 12 July 2026, Sunday | 5:35 AM | 8:27 PM | 14h 51m |
| 13 July 2026, Monday | 5:36 AM | 8:26 PM | 14h 50m |
| 14 July 2026, Tuesday | 5:37 AM | 8:26 PM | 14h 49m |
| 15 July 2026, Wednesday | 5:37 AM | 8:25 PM | 14h 47m |
| 16 July 2026, Thursday | 5:38 AM | 8:25 PM | 14h 46m |
| 17 July 2026, Friday | 5:39 AM | 8:24 PM | 14h 44m |
| 18 July 2026, Saturday | 5:40 AM | 8:23 PM | 14h 43m |
| 19 July 2026, Sunday | 5:41 AM | 8:23 PM | 14h 41m |
| 20 July 2026, Monday | 5:42 AM | 8:22 PM | 14h 40m |
| 21 July 2026, Tuesday | 5:42 AM | 8:21 PM | 14h 38m |
| 22 July 2026, Wednesday | 5:43 AM | 8:20 PM | 14h 37m |
| 23 July 2026, Thursday | 5:44 AM | 8:20 PM | 14h 35m |
| 24 July 2026, Friday | 5:45 AM | 8:19 PM | 14h 33m |
| 25 July 2026, Saturday | 5:46 AM | 8:18 PM | 14h 31m |
| 26 July 2026, Sunday | 5:47 AM | 8:17 PM | 14h 30m |
| 27 July 2026, Monday | 5:48 AM | 8:16 PM | 14h 28m |
| 28 July 2026, Tuesday | 5:49 AM | 8:15 PM | 14h 26m |
| 29 July 2026, Wednesday | 5:50 AM | 8:14 PM | 14h 24m |
| 30 July 2026, Thursday | 5:51 AM | 8:13 PM | 14h 22m |
| 31 July 2026, Friday | 5:51 AM | 8:12 PM | 14h 20m |
Brooklyn sits on the southwestern tip of Long Island, with Upper New York Harbor to the west and the Atlantic Ocean to the south. The varied coastline, from harbor piers to open Atlantic beach, offers good conditions for both sunrise and sunset throughout the year.
The boardwalk faces south-southeast along the Atlantic shore, giving a flat, open ocean horizon for watching the sun rise. Take the D, F, N, or Q train to Coney Island-Stillwell Av; the beach is about 200m from the exit and free to access.
The pedestrian path on the south side of the bridge sits about 36m above the East River and faces east over the rooftops of Brooklyn and Queens. Brooklyn-side entrance at Broadway and Bedford Av (J/M/Z to Marcy Av).
At 54m, Lookout Hill is Brooklyn's highest natural point; in winter and early spring, bare trees open up views to the east over the flat terrain of Brooklyn and Queens. Enter from Parkside Av or Ocean Av near the park's southern edge; no admission fee.
This 180m pier extends south into Jamaica Bay with an unobstructed water horizon to the east and southeast, well away from Midtown's light pollution. Free on-site parking; the pier is open daily from 6am, managed by the National Park Service.
The 0.8km esplanade sits above the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway and faces west-southwest over the East River toward Lower Manhattan. Closest subway stop is Clark St (2/3 lines); no entry fee, open 24 hours.
From the bridge's midspan, the view west opens onto the Manhattan skyline with no obstructions. The walkway is free and open 24 hours; Manhattan-side access from Delancey-Essex St (F/J/M/Z lines).
From the summit, the horizon to the south extends toward the Atlantic; in winter there are also filtered views westward over Prospect Park's meadows. Park hours are 5am to 1am.
The pier in Louis Valentino Jr. Park faces west-northwest over Buttermilk Channel and Upper New York Harbor, with a direct sightline to the Statue of Liberty. Red Hook has no subway service; take the B61 bus to Coffey St or drive (street parking on Coffey St). Free entry.