Purchase, New York, is a hamlet within the Town of Harrison in Westchester County, home to approximately 4,000 residents arranged across a landscape of sweeping corporate campuses, wooded estates, equestrian properties, and two of the most significant cultural institutions in all of Westchester — a place whose character is defined less by a traditional village center than by the extraordinary density of institutional, corporate, and artistic resources compressed into its Anderson Hill Road and Bedford Road corridors, by its position as the global headquarters of PepsiCo whose campus hosts one of the finest corporate sculpture gardens open to the public anywhere in the United States, by the Purchase College campus of the State University of New York whose performing arts center and Neuberger Museum make it a genuine regional cultural anchor, and by a small but distinguished cluster of Anderson Hill Road restaurants that serve the business travelers, students, faculty, and residents who constitute Purchase’s unusually heterogeneous daily population. Developed primarily across the late 19th and early 20th centuries as an enclave of Gilded Age estates and gentleman farms — its name derived from the colonial-era practice of recording land acquisitions as “purchases” — Purchase retains a rural and institutional character unlike any other Westchester hamlet, a quality that makes its two great public cultural destinations feel all the more improbable and all the more rewarding. The Donald M. Kendall Sculpture Gardens at 700 Anderson Hill Road — open Saturdays and Sundays from 10 AM to 4 PM — is Purchase’s most magnificent and most celebrated public destination, a 168-acre landscape of meticulously manicured grounds surrounding PepsiCo’s world headquarters, with sculptures by Alexander Calder, Auguste Rodin, Henry Moore, Claes Oldenburg, and dozens of other 20th-century masters spaced throughout the grounds in a way described by visitors as not overdone, with stunning vistas of nature all around, gravel walking paths described as very accessible for a range of people and youngsters, occasional gardens adding wonderful color to the walking trails, some trees labeled so visitors can learn about the species, and an atmosphere described as serene and perfect for a quiet afternoon stroll — a sculpture garden described as a hidden gem beyond extraordinary and one that inspires visitors who come in spring to surely plan a return in other seasons to see how the landscape changes around the art. The Neuberger Museum of Art at 735 Anderson Hill Road on the Purchase College campus — open Wednesday through Sunday from noon to 5 PM — is the area’s finest and most important visual arts institution, a museum described as a hidden gem on the campus of Purchase College with a permanently diverse and well-presented collection of modern and contemporary art, a gift shop described as awesome, an atmosphere of much-needed peace on the quiet weekend campus described as also architecturally cool, admission described as $5 on weekdays with free entry on certain days, and staff including a warmly remembered security guard who encouraged a first-time visitor to return in a few months when the exhibitions change — a museum described as a fantastic four-star destination for anyone who appreciates modern and contemporary art and as the kind of place where 30 quiet minutes of looking genuinely repays the trip. Cranberry Lake Preserve at 1609 Old Orchard Street in neighboring West Harrison — open daily from 9:30 AM to 4 PM — is the area’s finest and most rewarding hiking destination for visitors of all skill levels, with well-marked and maintained trails for which paper trail maps are available at the trailhead, a lookout point next to a pond, a dramatic rock quarry trail described as an absolute must-climb, a lodge at the parking lot, and an atmosphere described by solo hikers and families alike as amazing, calm, and relaxing — a preserve described as an incredible hiking spot so close to New York City and one that consistently earns descriptions like the absolute best experience from every visitor who makes the short drive from Purchase’s Anderson Hill Road corridor. Purchase’s dining scene is compact but concentrated along Anderson Hill Road in a cluster of restaurants that have grown into reliable gathering places for the campus, corporate, and residential communities that make up this hamlet’s unusually eclectic daily life. Trattoria 632 at 632 Anderson Hill Road is Purchase’s most celebrated and most passionate Italian dining room — open seven days from 11 AM, with homemade pasta described as some of the best fresh pasta ever had, a spicy rigatoni described as absurdly good and a standout that demands its own sentence, a Chicken Scarpariello described as the best a visitor had ever had, carbonara done with a yolk on top and described as quite good, a Cavatelli Broccoli di Rabe described as divine, a freshly made bread brought to the table throughout the meal described as great, a Caprese salad described as fresh and a great starter, a beautiful white marble bar, and an overall experience described as a really great find tucked away on one of the charming roads of Purchase — a restaurant that inspires visitors to leave full and happy and declare bravo. La Casa Purchase at 578 Anderson Hill Road is the hamlet’s most vibrant and festively atmospheric dining destination — open Tuesday through Sunday with weekend brunch, with a trio of salsas described as a must-have done with creative flavors and exceptionally well, chorizo tacos described as the move, carne asada described as bringing the flavor, a tuna tartare described as light and clean, chicken mole described as done with deep flavors, ribs drawing praise, huevos rancheros and torrejas described as both amazing at Sunday brunch, cocktails described as spectacular with fresh in-house ingredients by bartender Gio whose outstanding margaritas you can truly taste the quality of, and an overall environment described as a great find a little off the beaten path whose consistent food and accommodating atmosphere make it one of those places described as absolutely worth coming back to — including for the once-a-month prix fixe steak night that regulars describe as not to be missed. Cobble Stone at 620 Anderson Hill Road rounds out Purchase’s dining picture as its most reliable and most neighborhood-defining American pub — open seven days from 11:30 AM, with food described as great across sandwiches, apps, and burgers, a lively and fun atmosphere whose appearance in numerous television shows is noted on the menu with some pride, a server who was described as working his butt off to take care of a full room, and an owner described as a gem who creates exactly the kind of place described as what both a hungry stomach and a weary soul were looking for — a pub whose combination of consistent American cooking, convivial atmosphere, and genuine hospitality has made it the day-in, day-out anchor of the Purchase dining community for the students, executives, and residents who make this singular hamlet their home.