
Crossing the finish on Central Park South after 26.2 miles through five boroughs is the kind of thing a medal doesn't fully capture. The shape of what you ran — that loop from Staten Island through Brooklyn, Queens, the Bronx, and back into Manhattan — is what makes an NYC Marathon finisher poster worth having. Five boroughs on one map tells the story in a way a time stamp alone never could.
The race opens on the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge, a mile of gradual climb suspended over the harbor with lower Manhattan visible in the distance. The descent into Bay Ridge starts your long run north through Brooklyn — 13 miles of wide streets and crowd noise that builds neighborhood by neighborhood along Fourth Avenue. The energy here is dense and sustaining, and it's dangerously easy to run too fast.
Around mile 15, you climb onto the Queensboro Bridge. No spectators are allowed on the bridge itself, so for the better part of a mile it's just footsteps and breathing — then you come off the other side onto First Avenue and the crowd noise hits you like a pressure change. It's one of the more disorienting moments in running, in the best sense. A short out-and-back into the Bronx follows, and then Central Park at mile 24. The park is narrow and rolling, and by now your legs know exactly where you've been. The finish comes on Central Park South with the skyline behind it.
The five-borough route is one of the reasons the NYC Marathon makes such a distinctive event poster — the shape of that course, threading through a city that dense, is immediately recognizable.
Running New York means the city met you out there — two million people lining the streets of their own neighborhoods on a Sunday morning. That's worth more than a finish time, and it maps beautifully at makemap.
Turn your achievement into art and commemorate your journey with a custom map poster or wearable
Start CreatingWhether you've completed this event or are planning to, create a stunning map poster or wearable to celebrate your journey.