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Energy Star Qualified Buildings
1 ENERGY STAR® Qualified Buildings As of 1-1-03 Building Address City State Alabama 10044 3535 Colonnade Parkway Birmingham AL Bellsouth City Center 600 N 19th St. Birmingham AL Arkansas 598 John L. McClellan Memorial Veterans Hospital 4300 West 7th Street Little Rock AR Arizona 24th at Camelback 2375 E Camelback Phoenix AZ Phoenix Federal Courthouse -AZ0052ZZ 230 N. First Ave. Phoenix AZ 649 N. Arizona VA Health Care System - Prescott 500 Highway 89 North Prescott AZ America West Airlines Corporate Headquarters 111 W. Rio Salado Pkwy. Tempe AZ Tempe, AZ - Branch 83 2032 West Fourth Street Tempe AZ 678 Southern Arizona VA Health Care System-Tucson 3601 South 6th Avenue Tucson AZ Federal Building 300 West Congress Tucson AZ Holualoa Centre East 7810-7840 East Broadway Tucson AZ Holualoa Corporate Center 7750 East Broadway Tucson AZ Thomas O' Price Service Center Building #1 4004 S. Park Ave. Tucson AZ California Agoura Westlake 31355 31355 Oak Crest Drive Agoura CA Agoura Westlake 31365 31365 Oak Crest Drive Agoura CA Agoura Westlake 4373 4373 Park Terrace Dr Agoura CA Stadium Centre 2099 S. State College Anaheim CA Team Disney Anaheim 700 West Ball Road Anaheim CA Anahiem City Centre 222 S Harbor Blvd. Anahiem CA 91 Freeway Business Center 17100 Poineer Blvd. Artesia CA California Twin Towers 4900 California Ave. Bakersfield CA Parkway Center 4200 Truxton Bakersfield CA Building 69 1 Cyclotron Rd. Berkeley CA 120 Spalding 120 Spalding Dr. Beverly Hills CA 8383 Wilshire 8383 Wilshire Blvd. Beverly Hills CA 9100 9100 Wilshire Blvd. Beverly Hills CA 9665 Wilshire 9665 Wilshire Blvd. -
NYC's Secret Celebrity Hotspot, Turtle
EASTERN CONSOLIDATED IN THE PRESS AS APPEARED IN BISNOW ON MARCH 20, 2017 Neighborhood Tour: NYC’s Secret Celebrity Hotspot, Turtle Bay Four hundred years ago, Mid- tric posts scattered throughout town East was a tuft of wilder- the neighborhood. ness on the banks of the East River. As is the case for much “Most New Yorkers aren’t even of New York City’s early colonial aware that this beautiful oasis history, Dutch settlers gradual- exists,” said Adelaide Polsinel- ly built the first neighborhoods, li, principal of NYC brokerage snapping up parcels of free land Eastern Consolidated. “It’s a handed out by Peter Stuyvesant sleepy enclave in the city, but along what is now 41st to 53rd steps away from bustling Mid- streets. The Dutch moniker for town.” the knife-shaped bay — deutal in translation — was anglicized Why the perpetual lack of out- to today’s Turtle Bay. side interest, particularly in a neighborhood teeming with a Despite its relative proximity to microcosmic snapshot of ev- Grand Central, NYC landmarks erything the city has to offer? and countless retail and din- Turns out, it was built that way ing options, the former home from the very beginning. of Greta Garbo, Katharine Hepburn, Paul Newman, E.B. Turtle Bay is peppered with White and Kurt Vonnegut has traces of nearly every major remained quietly overlooked phase of American history. Mid- in the heart of Manhattan. The town development flourished neighborhood’s sequestered on the heels of the Civil War, nature has long made it the with middle- and upper-mid- perfect hideaway for celebrities dle-class residents filling up the seeking an escape from prying townhouses springing up along eyes. -
United States District Court Southern District of New York
Case 1:21-cv-02221 Document 1 Filed 03/15/21 Page 1 of 64 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK HOUSING RIGHTS INITIATIVE Plaintiff, v. COMPASS, INC.; 65 BERGEN LLC; THE STRATFORD, LLC; CORCORAN GROUP LLC; PROSPECT OWNERS CORP.; BOLD LLC; RING DING LLC; E REALTY INTERNATIONAL CORP; JACKSON HT. ROOSEVELT DEVELOPMENT II, LLC; MORGAN ROSE REALTY, LLC; BTG LLC; M Q REALTY LLC; EVA MANAGEMENT LLC; ERIC GOODMAN REALTY CORP.; 308 E 90TH ST. LLC; ROSA MAGIAFREDDA; NEW GOLDEN AGE REALTY INC., d/b/a CENTURY 21 NEW GOLDEN AGE REALTY, INC.; CHAN & SZE REALTY INCORPORATED; PETER Case No. 21-cv-2221 CHRIS MESKOURIS; HELL’S KITCHEN, INC.; MYEROWTZ/SATZ REALTY CORP.; PD PROPERTIES LLC; ECF Case SMART MERCHANTS INCORPORATED; COLUMBUS NY REAL ESTATE INC.; LIONS GATE NEW YORK LLC; MATTHEW GROS WERTER; 780 RIVERSIDE OWNER LLC; ATIAS ENTERPRISES INC.; PARK ROW (1ST AVE.) LTD.; VORO LLC; PSJ HOLDING LLC; WINZONE REALTY INC.; CAMBRIDGE 41-42 OWNERS CORP.; RAY-HWA LIN; JANE H. TSENG; ALEXANDER HIDALGO REAL ESTATE, LLC; EAST 89th ASSOCIATES, LLC; PALEY MANAGEMENT CORP.; MAYET REALTY CORP.; NATURAL HABITAT REALTY INC.; CHELSEA 251 LLC; HOME BY CHOICE LLC; HAMILTON HEIGHTS ASSOCIATES, LLC; JRL-NYC, LLC; EAST 34TH STREET, LLC; BRITTBRAN REALTY, Case 1:21-cv-02221 Document 1 Filed 03/15/21 Page 2 of 64 LLC; MANHATTAN REALTY GROUP; WEGRO REALTY CO; JM PRESTON PROPERTIES, LLC; 1369 FIRST AVENUE, LLC; 931-955 CONEY ISLAND AVE. LLC; BEST MOVE REALTY; FORTUNE GARDENS, INC.; URBAN REAL ESTATE PROPERTY GROUP, INC.; 348 EAST 62ND LLC; JAN REYNOLDS REAL ESTATE; 83RD STREET ASSOCIATES LLC; FIRSTSERVICE REALTY NYC, INC.; TENTH MANHATTAN CORP.; 3LOCATION3.CO REALTY, LLC; 469 CLINTON AVE REALTY LLC; 718 REALTY INC.; DOUBLE A PROPERTY ASSOCIATES – CRESTION ARMS LLC; GUIDANCE REALTY CORP.; COL, LLC; BEST SERVICE REALTY CORP.; CHANDLER MANAGEMENT, LLC; MTY GROUP, INC.; 165TH ST. -
ST. MARK's HISTORIC DISTRICT, Borough of Manhattan
Landmarks Preservation Commission January 14, 1969, Calendar No. I LP-0450 ST. MARK'S HISTORIC DISTRICT, Borough of Manhattan. The property bounded by tho western property I ine of 21 Stuyvesant Street, Stuyvesant Street, the western property I inG of 42 Stuyvesant Street the rear lot I ines of 42 and 44 Stuyvesant Street, the eastern property I ines of 44 and 46 Stuyvesant Street, Second Avenue, East I Ith Street, the western property I ine of 232 East 11th Street, a portion of the rear lot I ine of 129 East 10th Street the rear lot I ine of 127 East 10th Street, <i portion of the western property I i~e of 127 East 10th Street, the rear lot I ines of 125 through 109 East 10th Street, the western ~roperty lino of 109 East 10th Street, East 10th Street, the western prop erty line of 106 East 10th Street, and the rear lot I ines of 106 East 10th Street to the western property I inc of 21 Stuyvesant Street. Om April 12, 1966, the Landmarks Preservation Commission hold a public hearing on the proposed designation of the St. Mark's Historic District (Item No. 32). The hearing had been duly advertised in accordance with the provisions of law. Four witnesses spoke in favor of designation. There were no speakers in opposition to designation. In recent years, a great deal of effort has gone Into the rehabilitation of. this area, and many residents and property owners there have urged the Commission to make this designation. Supporters of the proposed designation include St. -
Installation of Trunk Water Mains Along Grand Street Project Phase I: Grand St
Manhattan September-October 2014 Installation of Trunk Water Mains Along Grand Street Project Phase I: Grand St. between Broadway and Bowery Phase II: Grand St. between Bowery and Essex St. Project # MED 609(606) The New York City Department of Design and Construction (NYCDDC) is managing a capital construction project MED609(606) along Grand Street between Broadway and Essex Street, including each intersection. DDC will install new trunk water mains, new traffic signs, street lighting, reconstruct distribution water mains, new roadway surface, curbs and sidewalks in certain locations, as well as, rehabilitate sewer, and upgrade private utilities. The entire project is anticipated to be completed by Spring 2017. Phase I of this project is scheduled to be completed by Fall 2014. Phase I final restoration has begun in April, 2014. Phase II is scheduled to begin in September, 2014. Work Completed to Date (Within Phase I Limits) 1. Curbs, Sidewalks & Roadway Have Been Replaced on Grand Street between Lafayette & Bowery 2. All Distribution Gas Mains Have Been Replaced (Over 2,000 feet) 3. All Distribution Water Mains Have Been Replaced (Over 2,000 feet) New Roadway with Street Markings on Grand Street between Centre Street & Centre Market Place 4. All 36” Trunk Water Main including Necessary Appurtenances Have Been Constructed (Over 2,000 feet) 5. Sewers in Need Have Been Rehabilitated or Replaced Special Needs (Approx. 500 feet) Individuals with special needs who may be uniquely impacted 6. Substandard Catch Basins (22) Have Been Replaced with by this project should contact the project’s Community Upgraded Structures for Improved Drainage Construction Liaison, as soon as possible, to make them 7. -
151 Canal Street, New York, NY
CHINATOWN NEW YORK NY 151 CANAL STREET AKA 75 BOWERY CONCEPTUAL RENDERING SPACE DETAILS LOCATION GROUND FLOOR Northeast corner of Bowery CANAL STREET SPACE 30 FT Ground Floor 2,600 SF Basement 2,600 SF 2,600 SF Sub-Basement 2,600 SF Total 7,800 SF Billboard Sign 400 SF FRONTAGE 30 FT on Canal Street POSSESSION BASEMENT Immediate SITE STATUS Formerly New York Music and Gifts NEIGHBORS 2,600 SF HSBC, First Republic Bank, TD Bank, Chase, AT&T, Citibank, East West Bank, Bank of America, Industrial and Commerce Bank of China, Chinatown Federal Bank, Abacus Federal Savings Bank, Dunkin’ Donuts, Subway and Capital One Bank COMMENTS Best available corner on Bowery in Chinatown Highest concentration of banks within 1/2 mile in North America, SUB-BASEMENT with billions of dollars in bank deposits New long-term stable ownership Space is in vanilla-box condition with an all-glass storefront 2,600 SF Highly visible billboard available above the building offered to the retail tenant at no additional charge Tremendous branding opportunity at the entrance to the Manhattan Bridge with over 75,000 vehicles per day All uses accepted Potential to combine Ground Floor with the Second Floor Ability to make the Basement a legal selling Lower Level 151151 C anCANALal Street STREET151 Canal Street NEW YORKNew Y |o rNYk, NY New York, NY August 2017 August 2017 AREA FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS/BRANCH DEPOSITS SUFFOLK STREET CLINTON STREET ATTORNEY STREET NORFOLK STREET LUDLOW STREET ESSEX STREET SUFFOLK STREET CLINTON STREET ATTORNEY STREET NORFOLK STREET LEGEND LUDLOW -
Chapter 9: Neighborhood Character
Chapter 9: Neighborhood Character A. INTRODUCTION As defined by the City Environmental Quality Review (CEQR) Technical Manual, neighborhood character is considered to be a combination of the many elements that creates each neighborhood’s distinct personality. These elements include land use, urban design, visual resources, historic resources, socioeconomics, traffic, and noise, as well as the other physical or social characteristics that help to describe the community. According to the CEQR Technical Manual, an assessment of neighborhood character is generally needed when the action would exceed preliminary thresholds in any one of the following areas of technical analysis: land use, urban design and visual resources, historic resources, socioeconomic conditions, transportation, or noise. An assessment is also appropriate when the action would have moderate effects on several of the aforementioned areas. Potential effects on neighborhood character may include: • Land Use. Development resulting from a proposed action could alter neighborhood character if it introduced new land uses, conflicts with land use policy or other public plans for the area, changes land use character, or generates significant land use impacts. • Socioeconomic Conditions. Changes in socioeconomic conditions have the potential to affect neighborhood character when they result in substantial direct or indirect displacement or addition of population, employment, or businesses; or substantial differences in population or employment density. • Historic Resources. When an action would result in substantial direct changes to a historic resource or substantial changes to public views of a resource, or when a historic resource analysis identified a significant impact in this category, there is a potential to affect neighborhood character. • Urban Design and Visual Resources. -
Download the Chinatown & Little Italy Historic District Map Guide
EAST HOUSTON MAP KEY A POINTS OF INTEREST 6 Shopping / dining Q 16 cULTURAL ATTRACTIONS K l’ordine figli d’italia 6 Giovanna’s ? POINTS OF INTEREST order of the sons of italy 128 Mulberry Street • (212) 334-3811 INFORMATION KIOSK (203 Grand). Established in 1905 as a support system to P O assist immigrants in their transition to American citizens. 7 Umberto’s Clam House PRINCE STREET A Columbus Park By 1921, 125,000 members met in 887 lodges country- 132 Mulberry Street • 212.431.7545 (Mulberry, Worth, Baxter & Bayard; Calvert Vaux, 1888). wide. In over a century, the Sons of Italy has grown into a www.umbertosclamhouse.com Public park replacing notorious slums of Mulberry Bend national organization promoting study, understanding and “The Heart of Little Italy.” and Five Points. Dedicated as Columbus Park in 1911 to appreciation of Italian-American heritage. honor the Italian community. Now a center of Chinatown 8 La Nonna Italian Restaurant community life. L engine no. 55 134 Mulberry Street • 212.334.6200 (363 Broome). A three-story Indiana limestone engine LAFAYETTE STREET B CHurch of the transfiguration house with mansard roof clad in slate and copper. Robert 9 Pellegrino’s 6 MULBERRY STREET N (23-31 Mott). Ashlar and brownstone gable front church H. Robertson designed this Beaux-Arts-style building, 138 Mulberry Street • 212.226.3177 2 with copper tower, built ca. 1801; 1815; 1861-68. which was built in 1898. NYC Landmark. www.littleitalynyc.com/pellegrinos New Museum NYC Landmark. SPRING STREET M Church of San Salvatore/ 10 Mulberry Street Cigar Co. -
Plague Diary by Margaret Porter Troupe
Plague Diary Margaret Porter Troupe, Graham Court Apartments, Harlem, New York City April 4, 2020 By the time I start this diary, I’ve been sheltering in since March 20th. The last person who’s visited us inside the apartment was Monique Clesca. She came to lunch here. We sat apart and neither of us wore facemasks. We elbow bumped and didn’t shake hands or kiss. I waited 14 days to see if I had symptoms of Covid-19. The police arrived yesterday and made the people who hang out in A. Phillip Randolph Square Park, (formerly Dewey Square), drinking, loitering, littering, and just being an eyesore and nuisance, leave the park. This little triangular park is directly across the street from Graham Court and where Miles Davis and other beboppers playing at Minton’s during the 1940s used to come to shoot up or do whatever they did there in-between sets. Minton’s is around the corner on 118th Street between 7th Avenue and St. Nicholas. The police or parks people removed the benches too and put up a chicken-wire fence at the entrances to keep people out. Now those people come across the street and congregate under the scaffolding in front of Graham Court. There’s a lot of drug dealing going on too. It feels quite a bit more unsafe around here lately. Must keep antenna raised for trouble. Woke up today thinking about my friend Cynthia, who was sounding scary to me yesterday as we discussed how we’re both feeling. I’ve been having congestion the last eight days and she has been having symptoms too but don’t know whether to attribute them to her blood pressure medication, pollen (it’s Spring now and everything’s bursting in bloom) or the novel coronavirus, Covid-19. -
An Immigrant Neighborhood: Interethnic and Interracial
Introduction n the winter of 1877, a group of mourners gathered in a dimly lit funeral parlor on Pearl Street in lower Manhattan to pay their last respects to Ah Fung (sometimes referred to as Ah Lung), a Chinese Iman who had been brutally murdered in his Lower East Side apartment. He had died of “ghastly wounds” at Bellevue Hospital after living for eighty hours with his brain exposed.1 Both Irish and Chinese people attended the funeral, including Mrs. Ah Fung, a woman of Irish ances- try. The New York World described the mixed gathering as “something unprecedented . [that gave] a good idea of the cosmopolitan character of the city”2 Given the well-publicized history of anti-Chinese hostility among the Irish working class, it is not surprising that the editors viewed the Ah Fung funeral as an anomaly.3 The details of Ah Fung’s life are murky. TheWorld described him as a laundry worker, while the New York Times reported that he had eked out a living making cigars and cigarettes with a Chinese man, Tung Ha, also known as “Peter Johnson,” and his white wife, Theresa.4 The three lived at 17 Forsyth Street, located in an ethnically mixed neighborhood across from the future site of the Manhattan Bridge. For unknown rea- sons, the household had not included Ah Fung’s wife; the two appar- ently had been living apart for several months before the attack.5 Like other working-class immigrant communities, the Chinese called on their local mutual aid societies to help cover the funeral costs.6 2 | intRODuction Members of the Ene E. -
The Skeletal Biology, Archaeology and History of the New York African Burial Ground: a Synthesis of Volumes 1, 2, and 3
THE NEW YORK AFRICAN BURIAL GROUND U.S. General Services Administration VOL. 4 The Skeletal Biology, Archaeology and History of the New York African Burial Ground: Burial African York New History and of the Archaeology Biology, Skeletal The THE NEW YORK AFRICAN BURIAL GROUND: Unearthing the African Presence in Colonial New York Volume 4 A Synthesis of Volumes 1, 2, and 3 Volumes of A Synthesis Prepared by Statistical Research, Inc Research, Statistical by Prepared . The Skeletal Biology, Archaeology and History of the New York African Burial Ground: A Synthesis of Volumes 1, 2, and 3 Prepared by Statistical Research, Inc. ISBN: 0-88258-258-5 9 780882 582580 HOWARD UNIVERSITY HUABG-V4-Synthesis-0510.indd 1 5/27/10 11:17 AM THE NEW YORK AFRICAN BURIAL GROUND: Unearthing the African Presence in Colonial New York Volume 4 The Skeletal Biology, Archaeology, and History of the New York African Burial Ground: A Synthesis of Volumes 1, 2, and 3 Prepared by Statistical Research, Inc. HOWARD UNIVERSITY PRESS WASHINGTON, D.C. 2009 Published in association with the United States General Services Administration The content of this report is derived primarily from Volumes 1, 2, and 3 of the series, The New York African Burial Ground: Unearthing the African Presence in Colonial New York. Application has been filed for Library of Congress registration. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the U.S. General Services Administration or Howard University. Published by Howard University Press 2225 Georgia Avenue NW, Suite 720 Washington, D.C. -
10-0406 NYU Map.Indd
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW 16 Alumni Hall (C-2) 33 3rd Avenue 52 Alumni Relations (B-2) 25 West 4th Street 17 Barney Building (C-2) W. 16TH STREET E. 16TH STREET 34 Stuyvesant Street IRVING PLACE IRVING 60 Bobst Library (B-3) CHELSEA 1 UNION SQUARE GRAMERCY 70 Washington Square South 48 Bookstore (B-2) W. 15TH STREET E. 15TH STREET 18 Washington Place 13 Brittany Hall (B-2) 55 East 10th Street 2 13 Broadway Windows (B-2) W. 14TH STREET E. 14TH STREET 12 Bronfman Center (B-2) 7 East 10th Street 4 3 8 5 Broome Street Residence (not on map) 400 Broome Street W. 13TH STREET E. 13TH STREET THIRD AVENUE 34 Brown Building (B-2) SIXTH AVENUE FIFTH AVENUE UNIVERSITY PLACE BROADWAY AVENUE SECOND AVENUE FIRST 6 FOURTH AVENUE 29 Washington Place 7 26 Cantor Film Center (B-2) 36 East 8th Street W. 12TH STREET E. 12TH STREET 67 Card Center (C-2) 9 14 383 Lafayette Street 15 1 Carlyle Court (B-1) 25 Union Square West W. 11TH STREET E. 11TH STREET 9 Casa Italiana Zerilli-Marimò (A-1) 24 West 12th Street 11 12 13 80 Coles Sports and Recreation Center (B-3) 181 Mercer Street W. 10TH STREET E. 10TH STREET 32 College of Arts and Science (B-2) 10 33 Washington Place 16 17 College of Dentistry (not on map) 345 East 24th Street W. 9TH STREET E. 9TH STREET 41 College of Nursing (B-2) 726 Broadway STUYVESANT ST. CHARLES ST. GREENWICH VILLAGE EAST VILLAGE 51 Computer Bookstore (B-2) 242 Greene Street W.