Ardsley, New York, is a Westchester County village of approximately 4,500 residents tucked into the gentle hills of the lower Hudson Valley just twenty miles north of Midtown Manhattan — a compact, quietly prosperous community whose character has been shaped by its position along the old Saw Mill River corridor, by a Gilded Age and early-20th-century residential identity that drew families seeking a gracious remove from the city, and by a Saw Mill River Road commercial spine that has accumulated, over the years, an honest and unpretentious collection of Italian restaurants and neighborhood taverns that punch well above a village of its size. Incorporated in 1896 and named for the English parish of Ardsley in Yorkshire — a nod to the Anglo affectations common among Westchester’s Victorian-era settlers — the village grew as a streetcar and later automobile suburb whose proximity to the Saw Mill River Parkway and the Bronx River Parkway cemented its suburban identity through the mid-20th century, and the Ardsley Station historical marker off Ashford Avenue near the South County Trailway stands as a quiet reminder of the rail era that preceded it. The Ardsley Historical Society at 9 American Legion Drive on the second floor is the village’s institutional keeper of memory — a modest but dedicated organization whose collected photographs, maps, and documents trace the transformation of a rural hamlet into one of Westchester’s most tightly knit incorporated villages. V.E. Macy Park on Saw Mill River Road is the region’s finest county park asset within the village orbit — a large, beautifully maintained Westchester County facility described by longtime residents as a place where, if you grew up in Westchester, you definitely spent time, with baseball fields under protective netting that allow clear sightlines for spectators, soccer fields, basketball courts, well-kept restrooms, ample parking, a reservable pavilion, and a broad grassy expanse that inspires the kind of unhurried afternoons that feel rarer and rarer in the lower Hudson Valley. Hart’s Brook Park and Preserve at 156 Ridge Road in neighboring Hartsdale is the area’s finest and most rewarding natural sanctuary — a color-coded trail system described by visitors as beautiful and well cared for with maps posted at regular intervals so you always know exactly where you are, populated by chipmunks, deer, squirrels, and a thriving bird community, with a greenhouse, sculpture-dotted grass areas, a pond, a working garden with volunteer opportunities, an annual Spooktoberfest, and a rare quietude described by regulars as a favorite trail they almost never share with a crowd. Ardsley’s dining scene is anchored along Saw Mill River Road and Ashford Avenue in a cluster that rewards the curious visitor with an unexpected density of Italian and American cooking for a village its size. La Catena at 871 Saw Mill River Road is Ardsley’s most celebrated Italian restaurant — open seven days from noon, with owner Jeff described as a man who builds genuine relationships with every customer and makes for a truly fun experience, a meatball sandwich described as the best one reviewer had ever had after traveling all over the country, classic Italian food executed at a level that inspired one diner to make the journey from Virginia for a 75th birthday celebration and describe the staff as making the party feel like family from the moment they walked in. L’inizio at 698 Saw Mill River Road is the village’s most intimate and refined Italian dining room — open Wednesday through Sunday from 5 PM with homemade pasta described as the anchor of a menu where every dish is also fantastic, gnocchi served as a special appetizer described as incredible, burrata with prosciutto and homemade mozzarella drawing consistent praise, a warm atmosphere with a great playlist adding to a homey vibe, and a beautiful bar area that makes the room feel equally suited to a quiet weeknight dinner or a proper celebration. Fiamma at 473 Ashford Avenue rounds out Ardsley’s dining picture as the village’s most exciting and welcoming newer arrival — a cozy, warmly designed space whose owner Luca greets customers personally, whose thin-crust pizza is described as tasting like you are in Italy, whose burrata and artichoke antipasti and mortadella pie drew one couple to declare they cannot wait to come back, and whose unexpected churros, tacos, and cappuccino with a touch of chocolate make it the kind of hidden gem described by one visitor as a place they could have spent the whole afternoon on a snowy day and not wanted to leave.