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Floral Park

Floral Park, New York

Photo: Jim.henderson · CC0

Floral Park is an incorporated village straddling the Queens–Nassau line, named for the seed-and-nursery business that once bloomed across its grounds — a heritage still legible in street names like Tulip, Violet, and Verbena. Its residential fabric is the suburban dream rendered in early-to-mid-20th-century brick and stucco: well-kept Tudors with timbering and steep gables, center-hall Colonials, and Cape Cods with dormers and bay windows, set on tidy, tree-lined blocks with private driveways and yards. Ownership skews overwhelmingly toward detached single-family houses, supplemented by some two-family homes and a modest stock of co-ops and condominiums. Three-to-four-bedroom houses generally trade in the high six figures, with the village offering relatively accessible pricing compared with pricier North Shore towns — a value entry point into Nassau ownership without leaving the Queens doorstep.

For commuters, the Long Island Rail Road is the headline. The Floral Park station, at Tulip and Atlantic Avenues, sits just west of where the Main Line and Hempstead Branch split: Main Line trains run one-seat to Penn Station in roughly 30 to 35 minutes, while Hempstead Branch trains now reach Grand Central Madison on the East Side directly, around 40 minutes. The station is ADA-accessible, with elevators to each platform, and sits along the completed Main Line Third Track, which added bi-directional capacity. Drivers reach the Cross Island Parkway, Grand Central Parkway, and Jericho Turnpike (NY Route 25) within minutes, linking to the wider parkway network and the boroughs.

Two compact downtowns give the village its rhythm. Tulip Avenue, the "Uptown" main street, lines up independent restaurants, bakeries, and pubs — the long-running Floral Park Diner, taco and gyro counters, and Irish tap rooms — behind brick and stone facades, and closes to traffic for the annual Chamber street fair timed to the Belmont Stakes. Covert Avenue adds a second walkable strip of shops and eateries. Belmont Park and UBS Arena, home of the New York Islanders, sit just over the line in Elmont for racing, concerts, and hockey. Elementary education is provided by the Floral Park-Bellerose Union Free School District (Floral Park-Bellerose School and John Lewis Childs School, PreK–6); secondary students attend Floral Park Memorial High School within the Sewanhaka Central High School District.

At a glance

Getting around
LIRR Floral Park station (Tulip & Atlantic Aves) sits just west of the Main Line / Hempstead Branch split: about 30–35 minutes to Penn Station on the Main Line and roughly 40 minutes to Grand Central Madison on the Hempstead Branch. The station is ADA-accessible. The Cross Island Parkway, Grand Central Parkway, and Jericho Turnpike (NY Route 25) are minutes away.
Schools
Elementary education is provided by the Floral Park-Bellerose Union Free School District (Floral Park-Bellerose School and John Lewis Childs School, PreK–6). Secondary students attend Floral Park Memorial High School within the Sewanhaka Central High School District.
Character
A picturesque incorporated village on the Queens line with two walkable downtowns and a strong village-events calendar. Housing is mostly detached single-family Tudors, Colonials, and Capes on tidy tree-lined blocks, with some two-family homes and limited co-ops/condos.
Best for
Buyers who want village charm, walkable downtowns, and detached-house ownership with a fast one-seat LIRR ride to both Manhattan terminals — at relatively accessible Nassau pricing right at the Queens doorstep.