2021 Fabric Offerings - Alphabetical
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Walk to a Park Flatiron Gramercy Open-Space Resources West Village Stuyvesant Served Areas Town Greenwich No Allotted Population East Village Village
Marble Hill Inwood Washington Heights Hamilton Heights Central Manhattanville Harlem Morningside Heights Manhattan Valley East Harlem Upper West Side Carnegie Hill Upper Lincoln East Side Yorkville Square Lenox Hill Roosevelt Island Sutton Place Clinton Midtown Turtle Bay Midtown South Murray Hill Tudor City Chelsea Walk To A Park Flatiron Gramercy Open-Space Resources West Village Stuyvesant Served Areas Town Greenwich No Allotted Population East Village Village Noho Soho Miles Tribeca ¹ 0 0.5 1 Little Italy Lower East Side City of New York Park & Recreation Civic Center Chinatown Bill de Blasio, Mayor Battery Mitchell J. Silver, FAICP, Commissioner Park City Financial July, 2018 District Note: The walk analysis is performed in ArcGIS using a pedestrian street network and entrances to open spaces resources throughout the city. The standard of a quarter-mile walk is used for open space resources less than 6 acres and a half-mile walk is used for resources 6 acres or more as well as parks with outdoor pools. The walk analysis excludes open space resources that are not always accessible to the general public, like community gardens, nature areas without trails or other access, concessions, cemeteries, and undeveloped property. NYC Parks properties also excluded: standalone buildings and institutions, triangles and plazas less than 0.20-acres, parkways without active-play resources, strips and malls. Percent of New Yorkers within a walk to a park is calculated based on the 2010 Decennial Census population figures. . -
Manhattan: City Council, Assembly, and State Senate
Manhattan: City Council, Assembly, and State Senate M O South Riverdale Y S A H O Spencer Estates W L D U P A Y Pelham Bay O R 81 B Y P M 11 HA L 11 78 PE Spuyten Duyvil Marble Hill Pelham Parkway Morris Park Country Club 80 Middletown 13 34 34 NT AV RD MO AM RE DH T Westchester Square FOR E Fordham E Belmont 82 H U T C 33 H B Van Nest I Eastchester Bay R N O S O N N University Heights X R R V V R 14 R Inwood P Y P Y EP CROSS BRONX Tremont Parkchester Unionport 86 P E Tremont 76 RONX E ROSS B Sherman Creek 15 West Farms C P E R E N K C Mount Hope U Castle Hill 10 R B Fort George 72 Bathgate Bruckner Bronx River 36 18 M A J O 79 S R OU Clason Point N D D VIE E 85 W A E V G Claremont Village Soundview A N P E 31 E R Washington Heights 28 E P N BR K TON 77 C ING U ASH R G W B Concourse Harding Park High Bridge 71 16 Morrisania 32 19 Longwood 27 E 161 ST Hunts Point 11 Melrose W 155 ST P E N A D I R E Sugar Hill H 17 S 7 The Hub Hamilton Heights 84 11 27 19 Mott Haven Port Morris 8 22 34 85 V A 70 30 5 Harlem L B S S A L G 9 U H W 125 ST A O East Harlem R D L E D M E La Guardia Airport R R V F R D Y Morningside Heights P E 34 E N O T 35 S S E T 36 I H 16 W 33 Spanish Harlem T 68 8 Steinway CATHEDRAL PY 31 28 34 Ditmars 21 W A K P Astoria Heights S I R 69 Manhattan Valley R O 32 M T 36 T M 22 30 28 E ST B 96 Q W W 96 ST E 11 E 28 T Carnegie Hill N B 13 34 R B E N TO S E 26 IT H 28 11 W 29 12 S 25 13 16 W 86 ST Yorkville Astoria Jackson Heights E Upper West Side H A R L E 39 M N 25 11 R 14 V W 79 ST W 80 ST 15 6 R D Y 25 17 A Upper East Side -
CITYREALTY NEW DEVELOPMENT REPORT MANHATTAN NEW DEVELOPMENT REPORT May 2015 Summary
MAY 2015 MANHATTAN NEW DEVELOPMENT REPORT CITYREALTY NEW DEVELOPMENT REPORT MANHATTAN NEW DEVELOPMENT REPORT May 2015 Summary Apartment prices in new development condominiums in Manhattan have increased at a fast clip, a trend boosted by the upper end of the market. Sales of new condominium units included in this report are expected to aggregate between $27.6 and $33.6 billion in sales through 2019. The average price of these new development units is expected to reach a record of $5.9 million per unit in 2015. At the same time, far fewer units are being built than during the last development boom, in the mid-2000s, therefore the number of closed sales is expected to increase more modestly than their prices. 2013 2014 2015-2019* TOTAL NEW DEVELOPMENT SALES $2.7B $4.1B $27.6B-$33.6B+ Pricing information for the 4,881 new development units covered in this report comes from active and in-contract listings, offering plans, and projections based on listing prices. For a complete list of buildings included in this report, see pages 5-6 (New Developments by Building Detail). Ultimately, sales of these apartments will total roughly $27.6 to $33.6 billion through 2019. Sales in new developments totaled $4.1 billion in 2014, up 50 percent from 2013. The 2013 total, $2.7 billion, also represented a significant increase from the $1.9 billion recorded in 2012. While total sales volume has increased in recent years, it is still substantially less than at the height of the market, in 2008, when new development sales totaled $10.4 billion. -
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Ten Manhattan Neighborhoods Accounted for Nearly 75 Percent of Residential Sales in New York City Over $2 Million in 2016 Neighborhood Number of Sales SoHo-TriBeCa-Civic Center-Little Italy 600 Upper East Side-Carnegie Hill 437 West Village 427 Hudson Yards-Chelsea-Flat Iron-Union Square 371 Upper West Side 289 Midtown-Midtown South 238 Lincoln Square 236 Turtle Bay-East Midtown 175 Battery Park City-Lower Manhattan 136 Lenox Hill-Roosevelt Island 134 Yorkville 132 DUMBO-Vinegar Hill-Downtown Brooklyn-Boerum Hill 104 Park Slope-Gowanus 94 Gramercy 75 Brooklyn Heights-Cobble Hill 73 Carroll Gardens-Columbia Street-Red Hook 70 Clinton 57 North Side-South Side 50 Murray Hill-Kips Bay 29 Clinton Hill 28 East Village 24 Fort Greene 24 Central Harlem South 23 Prospect Heights 22 Morningside Heights 19 Central Harlem North-Polo Grounds 18 Greenpoint 18 Forest Hills 16 Bedford 14 Homecrest 14 Borough Park 13 East Harlem South 13 Hamilton Heights 13 Hunters Point-Sunnyside-West Maspeth 13 Midwood 11 Ocean Parkway South 9 Windsor Terrace 9 Flatbush 8 North Riverdale-Fieldston-Riverdale 8 Prospect Lefferts Gardens-Wingate 8 Crown Heights North 7 East Williamsburg 6 Bay Ridge 5 Lower East Side 5 Douglas Manor-Douglaston-Little Neck 4 Continued on next page. Neighborhood Number of Sales Flushing 4 Todt Hill-Emerson Hill-Heartland Village-Lighthouse Hill 4 Whitestone 4 East Harlem North 3 Stuyvesant Heights 3 Sunset Park East 3 Bensonhurst West 2 Brighton Beach 2 Bushwick North 2 Chinatown 2 Crown Heights South 2 Sheepshead Bay-Gerritsen Beach-Manhattan Beach 2 Astoria 1 Bath Beach 1 Bushwick South 1 Charleston-Richmond Valley-Tottenville 1 Eastchester-Edenwald-Baychester 1 Ft. -
Manhattan Neighborhoods
NEIGHBORHOODS DOWNTOWN. Downtown Manhattan Below 14th Street Little Germany (historic) 7th to 10th Streets; Avenues A to B Alphabet City and Loisaida Houston to 14th Streets; FDR Drive to Avenue A East Village Houston to 14th Streets; the East River to the Bowery Greenwich Village Houston to 14th Streets; Broadway to the Hudson River NoHo Houston Street to Astor Place; the Bowery to Broadway Bowery Canal to 4th Streets; the Bowery West Village Houston to 14th Streets; 6th Avenue (or 7th Avenue) to the Hudson River Lower East Side Canal to Houston Streets; the East River to the Bowery SoHo Canal to Houston Streets; Lafayette to Varick Streets Nolita Broome to Houston Streets; the Bowery to Lafayette Street Little Italy Mulberry Street from Canal to Broome Streets Chinatown Chambers to Delancey Streets; East Broadway to Broadway Financial District Below Chambers Street Five Points (historic) Worth and Baxter Streets Cooperative Village Frankfort to Grand Streets; FDR Drive to East Broadway Two Bridges Brooklyn Bridge to Montgomery Street; St. James Place to the East River Tribeca Vesey Street to Canal Street; Broadway to the Hudson River Civic Center Vesey to Chambers Streets; the East River to Broadway Radio Row (historic) Greenwich Street from Cortlandt to Dey Streets (World Trade Center site) South Street Seaport South of Fulton Street and along the FDR Drive Battery Park City West of West Street Little Syria (historic) Washington Street from Battery Park to above Rector Street BETWEEN DOWNTOWN AND MIDTOWN. Flower District 26th to 28th -
1717 Broadway Provides New Opportunities with Commanding Storefront Visibility at the Northwest Corner of 54Th Street
Where Times Square Meets Columbus Circle CONCEPTUAL RENDERING 1717 Broadway provides new opportunities with commanding storefront visibility at the northwest corner of 54th Street. Located at the base of a 70-story, 639-room dual hotel building, this unique space is the perfect retail, dining and entertainment destination! With an expansive wraparound glass storefront, the opportunities range in size from 950-12,033 square feet providing unbeatable flexibility and visibility for travelers, residents and office workers alike! A Retail Convergence Existing Conditions GROUND FLOOR SPACE DETAILS SECOND & FIFTH FLOOR ACCESS EXISTING CONDITIONS Ground Floor Space A 1,630 SF SPACE B Space B 1,143 SF BROADWAY 1,143 SF Second Floor Space C 7,318 SF 85 FT HOTEL LOBBY CEILING HEIGHTS Ground Floor 19 FT SPACE A 1,630 SF Second Floor 19 FT 45 FT COMMENTS WEST 54TH STREET All uses considered All logical ground floor divisions considered SECOND FLOOR An additional 1,200 SF area available to be built for a Mezzanine space Second Floor tenant to utilize a dedicated entrance on Broadway for direct access to the Second Floor – vertical transportation in place (stair and elevator) Several flexible signage opportunities available SPACE C 7,318 SF MECHANICAL MEZZANINE Details734 SF GROUND FLOOR SECOND FLOOR SCENARIO 1 SECOND & FIFTH FLOOR ACCESS SINGLE TENANT LAYOUT Ground Floor Space A 2,773 SF BROADWAY Second Floor Space B 7,318 SF 85 FT SPACE B CEILING HEIGHTS HOTEL LOBBY MECHANICAL 7,318 SF MEZZANINE Ground Floor 19 FT 734 SF SPACE A Second Floor 19 FT -
Slices of “The Big Apple” This Is New York City
Slices of “The Big Apple” This is New York City An anthology of Wit, Reflections & Amusements Cliff Strome Licensed NYC Private Tour Guide 1 Slices of “The Big Apple” This is New York City An anthology of Wit, Reflections & Amusements Cliff Strome Licensed NYC Private Tour Guide 2 Cliff Strome, is a Licensed New York City Guide, recipient of The City of New York Dept. of Consumer Affairs highest rating, nominated Best Private NYC Tour Guide by The Association of New York Hotel Concierges (2011 and 2014), awarded The TripAdvisor Certificate of Excellence (2013, 2014, 2015, 2016 & 2017,). Cliff has achieved the highest percentage of five star reviews (Excellent) on TripAdvisor, at the rate of 99% based on over 500 reviews. [email protected] www.customandprivate.com Cliff Strome 382 Central Park West New York, NY 10025 212-222-1441 March 2018 3 For Aline My wife, my candle, the light of my life. 4 Table of Slices Introduction 8 Chapter I “No! You Go!” 9 The Legally Blind Woman 17 “Can’t Go To Motor Vehicle Without a Pen!” 14 Dr. Bartha vs. Big Bertha 20 Acts of Kindness, a 1,000 Minute 27 “I’m one of the Owners” 32 “They Better Not!” 37 220 Central Park South 40 Chapter II My Playbook 1 in 8,300,000 45 “Friend of the House” 51 Singles “Seen” 57 One of These Glasses is Not Like the Other 70 A Tree Doesn’t Grow in Central Park 75 “I Got Interests on Both Sides” 78 “Instant Funship” 96 The 47th St. -
Manhattan Community District 8: UPPER EAST SIDE (Including Carnegie Hill, Lenox Hill, Roosevelt Island, Upper East Side and Yorkville)
COMMUNITY HEALTH PROFILES 2015 Manhattan Community District 8: UPPER EAST SIDE (Including Carnegie Hill, Lenox Hill, Roosevelt Island, Upper East Side and Yorkville) Health is rooted in the circumstances of our daily lives and the environments in which we are born, grow, play, work, love and age. Understanding how community conditions affect our physical and mental health is the first step toward building a healthier New York City. UPPER EAST SIDE TOTAL POPULATION WHO WE ARE 226,640 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 POPULATION BY RACE AND ETHNICITY 79% White* 9% Asian* 7% Hispanic 3% Black* 2% Other* POPULATION BY AGE HAVE LIMITED 38% ENGLISH NYC 23% PROFICIENCY 24% 18% 14% NYC ARE 6% 0–17 18–245% 25–44 45–64 65+ FOREIGN 0 - 17 18-24 25-44 45-64 65+ BORN PERCENT WHO REPORTED THEIR OWN HEALTH AS “EXCELLENT,” LIFE EXPECTANCY ”VERY GOOD” OR “GOOD” 85.0 92% YEARS * Non-Hispanic Note: Percentages may not sum to 100% due to rounding Sources: Overall population, race and age: U.S. Census Bureau Population Estimates, 2013; Foreign born and English proficiency: U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey, 2011-2013; Self-reported health: NYC DOHMH Community Health Survey, COMMUNITY2011-2013; Life Expectancy: HEALTH NYC DOHMH PROFILESBureau of Vital Statistics, 2015: 2003-2012 UPPER EAST SIDE 2 Note from Dr. Mary Bassett, Commissioner, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene New York City is a city of neighborhoods. Their diversity, rich history and people are what make this city so special. But longstanding and rising income inequality, combined with a history of racial residential segregation, has led to startling health inequities between neighborhoods. -
Brooklyn, New York 100 William Street
CLIENTS: ASSESSMENT/ZONING/LANDMARKS 100 Broadway (aka 381 Berry Street); Brooklyn, New York 100 William Street; New York, New York 101 Barclay Street; New York, New York 108 East 96th Street; New York, New York 110 Washington Street; New York, New York 111 Wall Street; New York, New York 123 West 57th Street; New York, New York 1251 Avenue of the Americas; New York, New York 127 East 30th Street; New York, New York 1325-30 Fifth Avenue; New York, New York 142-148 East 57th Street; New York, New York 1497 Carroll Street; Brooklyn, New York 15 West 81st Street; New York, New York 1693-97 First Avenue; New York, New York 171-173 West 107th Street; New York, New York 17-21 West 52nd Street (The '21' Club); New York, New York 18 East 48th Street; New York, New York 180 Maiden Lane; New York, New York 210-214 East 86th Street; New York, New York 233 East 69th Street; New York, New York 25 Broadway; New York, New York 250 East 54th Street; New York, New York 250 East 60th Street; New York, New York 30 Broad Street; New York, New York 300 Park Avenue; New York, New York 303 East 37th Street; New York, New York 305 East 40th Street; New York, New York 33-00 Northern Boulevard; Long Island City, New York 338 Bowery; New York, New York 35 Sutton Place; New York, New York 351-353 Central Park West; New York, New York 360 Lexington Avenue; New York, New York 404 Park Avenue South; New York, New York 425 Park Avenue; New York, New York 45 Broadway; New York, New York 48 Wall Street; New York, New York 485 Lexington Avenue; New York, New York 112 Madison -
Finishing the Job: the Unprotected Architecture And
A report by Anthony W. Robins for Village Preservation The Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation 232 East Eleventh Street New York, NY 10003 212-475-9585 www.gvshp.org [email protected] Board of Trustees: Arthur Levin, President Trevor Stewart, Vice President Kyung Choi Bordes, Vice President Allan Sperling, Secretary/Treasurer Mary Ann Arisman Tom Birchard Dick Blodgett Jessica Davis Cassie Glover David Hottenroth Anita Isola John Lamb Justine Leguizamo Leslie Mason Ruth McCoy Andrew Paul Robert Rogers Katherine Schoonover Marilyn Sobel Judith Stonehill Naomi Usher Linda Yowell F. Anthony Zunino, III Staff: Andrew Berman, Executive Director Sarah Bean Apmann, Director of Research and Preservation Harry Bubbins, East Village and Special Projects Director Laura Fleischman, Program and Administrative Associate Ariel Kates, Manager of Programming and Communications Sam Moskowitz, Director of Operations Lannyl Stephens, Director of Development and Special Events Village Preservation (the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation) was founded in 1980 to preserve the architectural heritage and cultural history of Greenwich Village, the East Village, and NoHo. /gvshp /gvshp_nyc www.gvshp.org/donate Foreword Several neighborhoods, and several important veins of New York and American history, converge below Union Square. Greenwich Village, with its charming townhouses and prewar apartment buildings, Union Square and Ladies’ Mile, with their grand commercial emporia and robust industrial lofts, and the East Village with its pleasingly modest rowhouses, tenements, and factories, mix and mingle in these nearly twenty blocks where neighborhood boundaries are blurred, and building eras, styles, and types sit in sometimes-dramatic juxtaposition. But this area stands out for more than just its unusual amalgamation of features. -
Read HDC's Joint Letter with Greenwich Village Society For
Re: Opposing Amended Intro. 775, Scheduled for Land Use Vote June 7, Stated Council Vote June 9 Dear Council member, We strongly urge you to vote against the amended Intro 775 unless substantial further changes, outlined below, are made. The bill, sponsored by Council members David Greenfield and Peter Koo, seeks to impose deadlines on the Landmarks Preservation Commission’s ability to protect historic buildings. At its only public hearing last September, over 100 community groups, individuals and elected officials appeared in opposition to the proposal, expressing strong concerns that the bill would stifle community-driven preservation activity throughout the city and hamper rather than help agency decision-making. The only supporters of the bill represented business and real estate interests, and mostly spoke about the lack of transparency in the designation process. The changes which have been made do not adequately address the concerns raised at the hearing and by the public. In its modified form, the proposal still contains provisions that would make existing problems with the landmark designation process worse. For example, the bill requires that the Landmarks Preservation Commission must make decisions on potential historic districts within two years or they will be automatically withdrawn from consideration. Rather than speed up the Commission’s process, this would discourage the consideration of large, complicated or controversial districts. Moreover, the bill does not include protection for properties under consideration nor has Council committed to expand the staff or funding of the Commission (the city’s smallest agency charged with regulating more than 33,000 structures across all five boroughs). -
CARNEGIE Hillnews
Layout Fall 2017-11.28-website.qxp_Layout 1 12/5/18 11:29 AM Page 1 CARNEGIE HILL CARNEGIE HILL I Because it’s our home I Fall 20n17 / Vole. 38 / w Nº 2 s neighbors Governor leaves an opening INSIDE . TO STOP USE OF MARX BROTHERS CHN SPRING BENEFIT 2017: PLAYGROUND FOR DEVELOPMENT ANOTHER FABULOUS FABBRI FEST Pages 17-19 t a rally in front of the New York City office of Governor Andrew M. Cuomo SECOND GENERATION on October 23, CHN was joined by representatives from a coalition of civic CARNEGIE HILL DWELLERS organizations, including the Trust for Public Land, Municipal Art Society, Page 14 ANew Yorkers for Parks, NYC Park Advocates, the Historic Districts Council, MORE LANDMARK ISSUES Friends of the Upper East Side, the New York Landmarks Conservancy, Landmarks Page 22 West, and Alliance for a Human Scale City. The group urged the governor to veto the bill that would de-map (or alienate) as parkland the Marx Brothers Playground at ANDY WARHOL lived/worked/prayed in Carnegie 96th Street and Second Avenue and thus allow it to be used for development, i.e., permit Hill Page 34 the use of its newly acquired air rights to enable the construction of a planned 700-foot tower on the block. Continued on page 32 It was SPOOKTACULAR! Page 16. E C A P - L E D E I W E N N A Z U S Layout Fall 2017-11.28-website.qxp_Layout 1 12/5/18 11:29 AM Page 2 :HDW&RUFRUDQØSERVINGV&DUQHJLH+LOORIõFHZDQ THEWWRWKDQN\R COMMUNITYXIRUPDNLQJXVDYDOXDEOHSDUWRIWKL VFKHULVKHG QHLJKERUKRRG 3OHDVHYLVLWRXUQHZO\UHQRYDWHG 0DGLVRQ$YHQXHRIõFHWRPHHWRXUWDOHQWHGWHDPRI DJHQWVZKRDUHKDSS\FORWRKHOS\RX