Manhattan YAI LINK 212.273.6182 See Reverse for Clinical and Health Services

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Manhattan YAI LINK 212.273.6182 See Reverse for Clinical and Health Services To get started call Manhattan YAI LINK 212.273.6182 See reverse for clinical and health services. SUPPORT WORK & LIVING Family services Day services Midtown YAI HEADQUARTERS • Community Habilitation • Center-Based Day Habilitation 220 East 42nd Street, Skills training in the home and community • Community Based Program (CBP) 8th floor • Crisis Intervention New York, NY 10017 • CSIDD (Crisis Services for Individuals with Employment services Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities) 105 West 33rd Street, Crisis prevention and response • Pre-Vocational Services 9th Floor New York, NY 10120 • Educational Workshops on Eligibility • Supported Work and Training Adult Recreation and Other I/DD Topics Day Habilitation • Emergency Respite Reimbursement Residential services Employment Services Supplemental Day Habilitation • Family Reimbursement • Supervised Residential Opportunities • Family Support Groups 24 hours Harlem • Free Evaluations Assisting with Eligibility • Supportive Residential Opportunities Less than 24 hours per day 310 Lenox Avenue, For people without Medicaid New York, NY 10027 • Independent Living Skills Program Day Habilitation Social life, recreation, camping, • Parents with Special Needs and travel Madison Ave • Project Grown-Up 290 Madison Avenue, Parent training related to puberty and sexuality • Adult Evening and Weekend Recreation 3rd floor • Hankering for More • Project Intervene New York, NY 10017 Skills training and behavior management Social opportunities for adults Day Habilitation • Socialization Groups for People with Autism • Leisure Trax Supervised vacations for adults Chelsea • Transition to Independence th Program for young adults on autism spectrum • Mainstreaming at Camp (MAC) 319 West 16 Street, Meyer W. Nathans Camping Services New York, NY 10011 • Travel Training Supportive and inclusive overnight camp Emergency Overnight Respite Individualized travel training and “train the Overnight Respite trainer” workshops • Supplemental Day Habilitation • YAI Arts & Culture • You and I Schools Social skills training and recreation program Art access for all- Tickets, workshops, studio, iHOPE and day habilitation opportunities 101 West 116th Street, • YAI LINK 2nd floor Information and referral EDUCATION New York, NY 10026 School Respite • iHOPE School for ages 5 to 21 with brain injuries or MANHATTAN STAR ACADEMY* • Emergency Overnight brain-based disorders 180 Amsterdam Avenue, • In-Home 3rd floor • Manhattan Star Academy* • Overnight New York, NY 10023 School for ages 5 to 21 School • School Recess * Private tuition yai.org Call to make an Manhattan appointment See reverse for other YAI network services. HEALTH Premier HealthCare Center for Specialty Therapy Manhattan Midtown • Audiology • Augmentative and Alternative Communication Evaluation and 227 East 41st Street, th • Dentistry Treatment 8 floor New York, NY 10017 • Dermatology • Nutrition • Desensitization • Occupational Therapy Lenox** • Endocrinology • Physical Therapy 310 Lenox Avenue • Medical Social Work th th • Psychological Testing (btwn W. 125 & 126 ) New York, NY 10027 • Mental Health Services Including for OPWDD eligibility, guardianship evaluation, and • Neurology autism assessment Madison** • Nutrition • Psychosocial Evaluation 290 Madison Avenue • Occupational Therapy (btwn E. 40th & 41st Street) • Psychotherapy New York, NY 10017 • Ophthalmology Individual, group, collateral, and family ** Center for Specialty • Physical Therapy Therapy only • Podiatry • Sexual Consent Determination* • Primary Care Clinical services are also available in: Internal Medicine For more information about Center • Bronx Family Practice for Specialty Therapy services, or Pediatrics to make an appointment, call: • Brooklyn • Queens • Prosthetics and Orthotics 212.273.6100 x4998 • Psychiatry • Nassau • Suffolk • Speech Therapy • Westchester • Wheelchair/Equipment Clinic Clinic services may vary For more information about Premier by site. HealthCare services, or to make an appointment, call: 212.273.6272 * Private pay yai.org.
Recommended publications
  • NYCHA Facilities and Service Centers
    NYCHA Facilities and Service Centers BOROUGH DEVELOPMENT NAME ADDRESS Manhattan Baruch 595- 605 FDR Drive Staten Island Berry Houses 44 Dongan Hills Brooklyn Farragut 228 York Street Manhattan Harborview Terrace 536 West 56th Street Brooklyn Howard 1620 E N Y Avenue Manhattan Lexington 115 East 98th Steet Brooklyn Marcus Garvey 1440 E N Y Avenue Bronx Monroe 1802 Story Avenue Bronx Pelham Parkway 975 Waring Avenue Brooklyn Pink 2702 Linden Boulevard Queens Ravenswood 34-35A 12th Street Queens Ravenswood 34-35A 12th Street Brooklyn Red Hook East 110 West 9th Street Brooklyn Saratoga Square 930 Halsey Street Manhattan Washington Hts Rehab (Groups I and II) 500 West 164th Street Manhattan Washington Hts Rehab (Groups I and II) 503 West 177th Street Manhattan Wilson 405 East 105th Steet Manhattan Wise Towers/WSURA 136 West 91st Steet Brooklyn Wyckoff Gardens 266 Wyckoff Street Page 1 of 148 10/01/2021 NYCHA Facilities and Service Centers POSTCO STATUS SPONSOR DE Occupied Henry Street Settlement, Inc. Occupied Staten Island Mental Health Society, Inc. 10306 Occupied Spanish Speaking Elderly Council - RAICES Occupied NYCHA 10019 NYCHA HOLD NYCHA 11212 Occupied Lexington Children's Center 10029 Occupied Fort Greene Senior Citizens Council 11212 Vacant NYCHA Occupied Jewish Association Services For the Aged Occupied United Community Centers Occupied HANAC, Inc. 11106 Occupied HANAC, Inc. Occupied Spanish Speaking Elderly Council - RAICES Occupied Ridgewood-Bushwick Sr Citizens Council, Inc. Vacant NYCHA Occupied Provider Name Unknown Occupied
    [Show full text]
  • 116Th Street (Cb10)
    116TH STREET (CB10) Corridor Safety Improvements December 2016 PROJECT LOCATION . Part of safety improvements proposed on 116th St between Lenox Ave and Madison Ave . Busy corridor with residential and commercial land uses and several schools, children’s programs, senior centers, religious institutions nearby . 2/3 subway stop at Lenox Ave and nearby 6 subway stop at Lexington Ave . Many buses use 116th St: . Local buses: M116, M7, M102, M1 . Express buses: BxM6, BxM7, BxM8, BxM9, BxM10, BxM11 2 3 CB10 CB11 6 nyc.gov/dot 2 VISION ZERO PRIORITY W 116TH ST & Manhattan Priority Geographies LENOX AVE is a Vision Vision Zero Zero Priority • Multi-agency effort to reduce Intersection traffic fatalities in NYC • Borough Action Plans released in 2015 • Priority Intersections, Corridors, and Areas identified for each borough • On 116th St: • Intersections with Lenox Ave and Madison Ave identified as a Priority Intersections nyc.gov/dot 3 SAFETY DATA: PROJECT NEED W 116th St (Lenox Ave to 5th Ave): • 8 people severely injured (e.g., traumatic injuries typically requiring ambulance response) • 21 pedestrians injured at Lenox • 87 total injuries Total Injuries 2010-2014 42 3 Total KSI 35 KSI = persons 2010-2014 killed or severely 5 injured nyc.gov/dot 4 W 116TH ST & LENOX AVE: EXISTING CONDITIONS Long crossing distances for pedestrians, especially for seniors and children Lenox Ave is 80 feet wide Lenox Ave at W 116th St, looking south nyc.gov/dot 5 W 116TH ST & LENOX AVE: EXISTING CONDITIONS Pedestrians get stuck in the middle with no safe space
    [Show full text]
  • Harlem Transportation Study
    3.0 LAND USE AND ZONING Zoning The city is divided into three basic zoning districts: residential (R), commercial (C), and manufacturing (M). The three basic categories are further subdivided into lower, medium, and higher density residential, commercial and manufacturing districts. Development within these districts is regulated by use, building size, and parking regulations. Here is a brief description of the three basic zoning districts according to the Zoning Handbook: Residential District (R) In New York City, there are ten standard residential districts, R1 through R10. The numbers refer to the permitted density (R1 having the lowest density and R10 the highest) and other controls such as required parking. A second letter or number signifies additional controls are required in certain districts. R1 and R2 districts allow only detached single-family residences and certain community facilities. The R3-2 through R10 districts accept all types of dwelling units and community facilities and are distinguished by differing bulk and density, height and setback, parking, and lot coverage or open space requirements. Commercial District (C) The commercial districts reflect the full range of commercial activity in the city from local retail and service establishmentsDRAFT to high density, shopping, entertainment and office uses. There are eight basic commercial districts where two (C1 and C2 districts) are designed to serve local needs, one district (C4) is for shopping centers outside the central business district, two (C5 and C6 districts) are for the central business districts which embrace the office, retail, and commercial functions that serve the city and region, and three (C3, C7, and C8 districts) are designed for special purposes (waterfront activity, large commercial amusement parks and heavy repair services).
    [Show full text]
  • Travel Directions to Columbia University
    Department of Applied Physics & Applied Mathematics, Columbia University Travel Directions to Columbia University Columbia University is located on the Upper West Side of Manhattan at West 116th Street between Broadway and Amsterdam Avenues. The Non-Neutral Plasma Workshop will meet in Davis Auditorium (4th floor/campus level) of the CEPSR/Schapiro Building at 530 W. 120th Street, between Broadway and Amsterdam Avenue. From the Airport http://www.panynj.gov/ Taxi The easiest way to reach Columbia University from the airport is by taxi. The average fare from LaGuardia Airport (718-533- 3400), the closest airport to the campus, is $25, plus bridge and tunnel tolls and tip. Taxis depart from stands located outside the exits of the major terminals. Hail only marked yellow cabs with fares posted on the driver's door. Car services are also available curbside at the major terminals, or they may be prearranged. Kennedy Airport has a flat fare of $45 to any single stop in Manhattan. This does not include tolls and tip which will add another $10. Taxi service from Newark Airport into Manhattan is around $65 including tolls and tip. Bus Service The city M60 bus provides inexpensive service ($2.00) from LaGuardia Airport to Columbia University (leaving LaGuardia every 30 minutes from 4:50 am–1:00 am). The ride may last 45-60 minutes, depending on traffic. Call 718-330-1234 for up-to-date schedule and service information. The Gray Line Air Shuttle (212-315-3006 or 800-451-0455) provides bus service from both LaGuardia and Kennedy Airports to Grand Central Station and the Port Authority Bus Terminal.
    [Show full text]
  • Manhattan New Construction & Proposed Multifamily Projects 4Q20
    Manhattan New Construction & Proposed Multifamily Projects 4Q20 83 85 82 12 41 62 ID PROPERTY UNITS 6 30 Morningside Drive 205 Total Lease Up 205 12 HAP Seven NY 129 15 418 West 126th Street 75 19 Victoria Theatre 191 15 Total Under Construction 395 19 37 Broadway Development 130 6 41 210 Wadsworth Avenue 98 46 Total Planned 228 43 96th Street 171 43 46 Frederick Douglass Blvd 100 37 62 4037 Broadway 132 82 The Heights on Broadway 171 83 Sherman Plaza 272 85 3875 9th Avenue 614 Total Prospective 1,460 2000 ft Source: Yardi Matrix LEGEND Lease-Up Under Construction Planned Prospective Manhattan New Construction & Proposed Multifamily Projects 4Q20 44 73 ID PROPERTY UNITS 1 The Smile 233 3 Convivium 140 45 4 Sixty 125 141 4 39 23 26 5 Two Waterline Square 435 Total Lease Up 949 1 74 13 75 10 Sendero Verde Phase II 361 22 24 13 One East Harlem 404 25 Total Under Construction 765 49 22 15 West 118th Street 51 38 23 1971 Madison Avenue 93 10 24 72 East 120th Street 218 77 25 77 East 118th Street 202 47 26 East 127th Street 152 38 La Hermosa Tower 160 39 2031-2033 5th Avenue 240 Total Planned 1,116 48 44 58 West 135th Street 100 45 64-74 West 125th Street 200 47 1987-1991 3rd Avenue 59 76 48 1988-1996 2nd Avenue 185 49 248 East 120th Street 86 50 308 East 86th Street 68 78 52 Lenox Hill Hospital 200 73 Lenox Terrace Phase II 1,642 74 1800 Park Avenue 670 50 75 2460 2nd Avenue 730 3 76 321 East 96th Street 1,100 77 East River Plaza 1,100 52 5 78 Holmes Towers NextGen Development 339 Total Prospective 6,479 1000 ft Source: Yardi Matrix LEGEND
    [Show full text]
  • Emergency Response Incidents
    Emergency Response Incidents Incident Type Location Borough Utility-Water Main 136-17 72 Avenue Queens Structural-Sidewalk Collapse 927 Broadway Manhattan Utility-Other Manhattan Administration-Other Seagirt Blvd & Beach 9 Street Queens Law Enforcement-Other Brooklyn Utility-Water Main 2-17 54 Avenue Queens Fire-2nd Alarm 238 East 24 Street Manhattan Utility-Water Main 7th Avenue & West 27 Street Manhattan Fire-10-76 (Commercial High Rise Fire) 130 East 57 Street Manhattan Structural-Crane Brooklyn Fire-2nd Alarm 24 Charles Street Manhattan Fire-3rd Alarm 581 3 ave new york Structural-Collapse 55 Thompson St Manhattan Utility-Other Hylan Blvd & Arbutus Avenue Staten Island Fire-2nd Alarm 53-09 Beach Channel Drive Far Rockaway Fire-1st Alarm 151 West 100 Street Manhattan Fire-2nd Alarm 1747 West 6 Street Brooklyn Structural-Crane Brooklyn Structural-Crane 225 Park Avenue South Manhattan Utility-Gas Low Pressure Noble Avenue & Watson Avenue Bronx Page 1 of 478 09/30/2021 Emergency Response Incidents Creation Date Closed Date Latitude Longitude 01/16/2017 01:13:38 PM 40.71400364095638 -73.82998933154158 10/29/2016 12:13:31 PM 40.71442154062271 -74.00607638041981 11/22/2016 08:53:17 AM 11/14/2016 03:53:54 PM 40.71400364095638 -73.82998933154158 10/29/2016 05:35:28 PM 12/02/2016 04:40:13 PM 40.71400364095638 -73.82998933154158 11/25/2016 04:06:09 AM 40.71442154062271 -74.00607638041981 12/03/2016 04:17:30 AM 40.71442154062271 -74.00607638041981 11/26/2016 05:45:43 AM 11/18/2016 01:12:51 PM 12/14/2016 10:26:17 PM 40.71442154062271 -74.00607638041981
    [Show full text]
  • A Chronology of 125Th Street
    125th Street Chronology • 16th Century Native Americans inhabit summer village at what is now East 125th Street and the Harlem River. • 1609 Henry Hudson trades with Native Americans off the Manhattanville shoreline. • 1658 Pieter Stuyvesant founds the village of Nieuw Haarlem, part of which occupies the land at what would later become East 125th Street between First and Second avenues. • 1776 George Washington defeats the British in the Battle of Harlem Heights, driving the enemy south across what was then called the Hollow Way, later known ofOicially as West 125th Street. • 1806 Village of Manhattanville founded at an inlet along the Hudson River at what will soon become West 125th Street. 1811 The Randel Plan proposes a grid of streets blanketing Manhattan, including an East-West thoroughfare along a geological fault line thereafter known as 125th Street. • 1813 125th Street opens as one of Manhattan’s 15 major cross-town streets • 1814 Regular ferry service begins along the Harlem River from East 125th Street to downtown. • 1850s The public school at East 125th Street and Second Avenue admits it Oirst African-American student. • 1863-1872 Artist Thomas Nast plots the downfall of the Tweed Ring from his backyard studio at Fifth Avenue and 125th Street. • 1869 A group of German Jews relocates from the Lower East Side to East 125th Street and Third Avenue, establishing the core of uptown’s Jewish community. • 1889 Oscar Hammerstein opens the Harlem Opera House at 211 West 125th Street, paving the way for 125th Street’s development as an entertainment district. • 1904 The Interborough Rapid Transit’s Broadway line opens in Upper Manhattan, spanning West 125th Street with a viaduct featuring a 168.5-foot parabolic arch.
    [Show full text]
  • ~60 Ft Bring All Offers
    ~60 FT BRING ALL OFFERS JORDAN SUTTON (212) 589-5101 [email protected] ROBERT M. SHAPIRO (212) 660-7717 [email protected] TABLE OF CONTENTS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 1 DUE DILIGENCE 7 THE NEIGHBORHOOD 13 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The Opportunity: Cushman & Wakefield has been retained on an exclusive basis to arrange for the sale or lease of 32-42 West 125th Street. The subject property is in Northern Manhattan’s most vibrant retail corridor and boasts 60’ of frontage along 125th street. The property is a newly constructed retail condominium (2014) on the south side of West 125th Street between Fifth Avenue and Malcolm X Boulevard. The space is comprised of 5,950 above grade square feet and 2,409 below grade square feet totaling approximately 8,359 square feet. The ground floor features 17.5’ ceiling heights and contains floor to ceiling windows, providing the space with an abundance of natural light. The basement has 10.3’ ceilings and offers a surplus of raw open space. The property contains two separate entrances along 125th Street, providing the opportunity for future ownership to divide the existing space into multiple retail units. 125th Street is home to a plethora of national retail tenants including Chase, Starbucks, H&M, Bed Bath & Beyond, and Whole Foods. The property also benefits from its proximity to numerous development sites in the growing neighborhood of Harlem. The subject property is just steps away from the 125th Street MTA Station which is serviced by the @ # $ % ^ Subway lines and is just blocks away from the 125th Street Metro North Station.
    [Show full text]
  • F. Vehicular Traffic
    Chapter 9: Transportation (Vehicular Traffic) F. VEHICULAR TRAFFIC EXISTING CONDITIONS STREET AND ROADWAY NETWORK Traffic conditions in the study area vary in relation to a number of factors—the nature of the street and roadway network, surrounding land uses and the presence of major traffic generators, and the intensity of interaction between autos, taxis, trucks, buses, deliveries, and pedestrians. The study area contains five subareas, or zones—Lower Manhattan, the Lower East Side, East Midtown, the Upper East Side, and East Harlem—and each has different street and roadway characteristics along its length. East Midtown, the Upper East Side, and East Harlem are characterized by a regular street grid, with avenues running north-south and streets running east- west. Each of the major north-south avenues—First, Second, Third, Lexington, Park, Madison, and Fifth Avenues—are major traffic carriers. There is just one limited-access roadway, the FDR Drive, which extends around the eastern edge of the study area from its northern end to its southern end. A general overview of the character of the street and roadway network in each of the five zones is presented below. Lower Manhattan is characterized by an irregular grid pattern south of Canal Street. Except for a few major arterials, most streets within the area are narrow with usually just one "moving" lane. Travel is time-consuming and slow along them. Pedestrian traffic often overflows into the street space, further impeding vehicular traffic flow. Water Street and Broadway are the two key north-south streets in this area, and carry two or more effective travel lanes, yet are often difficult to negotiate due to frequent double-parked truck traffic.
    [Show full text]
  • Bridging the Gap: It May Be Further Than You Think!
    NYCTRC Bridging the Gap: It May Be Further than You Think! Ellyn Shannon and Bradley Brashears New York City Transit Riders Council 347 Madison Avenue NYCTRC Table of Contents INTRODUCTION ......................................................................................................................... 1 METHODOLOGY ........................................................................................................................ 1 FINDINGS ................................................................................................................................... 3 A Division ............................................................................................................................... 4 B Division ............................................................................................................................... 6 RECOMMENDATIONS ............................................................................................................... 8 A and B Division Platform by Line Detail Guide ...................................................................... 12 A Division Platform Detail ................................................................................................... 16 B Division Platforms Detail .................................................................................................. 32 Appendix Appendix A: Raised Platforms and Boarding Area Description .............................................. 72 Appendix B: Description of Vertical and Horizontal Gaps, Code
    [Show full text]
  • Low Income Housing Tax Credits Awarded by Hpd 2008 Funding Round
    LOW INCOME HOUSING TAX CREDITS AWARDED BY HPD 2008 FUNDING ROUND Applicant Name / Address / Project Amount Credit Reservation Contact / Phone County Reserved Year Date Stebbins-Prospect, LP Bronx $1,162,111 2009 10/08 c/o Belmont Arthur LDC 660 E 183rd Street Bronx, NY 10458 Consolato Cicciu (718) 295-2882 Liberty Avenue Housing Brooklyn $843,582 2009 10/08 c/o Bowery Residence Committee 324 Lafayette Street Christine Lalor-Chisholm (212) 533-5700 Clinton Housing West 30th Partners, L.P. New York $77,748 2008 10/08 c/o Clinton Housing Development Company 403 West 40th Street New York, NY 10018 Julian Felch (212) 967-1644 Prospect Supportive Housing Residence Bronx $685,231 2009 10/08 c/o Comunilife, Inc. 214 West 29th Street 8th floor New York, NY 10001 Ernesto Vigoreaux (212) 219-1618 WHD LLC New York $852,478 2009 10/08 c/o E.T. Management and Realty Corp. 5041 Broadway New York, NY 10034 Jose Espinal (212) 569-4256 Richard Wright Houses LP New York $511,861 2009 10/08 c/o ECDO 443 West 125th New York, NY 10009 Lydia E. Blakely (212) 531-3211 Mid-Harlem Housing Dev., LP New York $320,458 2009 10/08 c/o Global Partners, LLC 155 West 121st Street, Suite 1B New York, NY 10027 Ralph G. McKoy (212) 663-9960 LOW INCOME HOUSING TAX CREDITS AWARDED BY HPD 2008 FUNDING ROUND Applicant Name / Address / Project Amount Credit Reservation Contact / Phone County Reserved Year Date Cathedral Parkway Development LP New York $87,567 2008 10/08 c/o Global Partners, LLC 155 West 121st Street, Suite 1B New York, NY 10027 Ralph G.
    [Show full text]
  • History of the City of New York Syllabus
    History of the City of New York Columbia University- Fall 2001 Professor Kenneth T. Jackson History 4712 603 Fayerweather Hall Tues. & Thurs. 1:10pm-2:25pm- [email protected] 417 International Affairs Building “The city, the city my Dear Brutus – stick to that and live in its full light. Residence elsewhere, as I made up my mind in early life, is mere eclipse and obscurity to those whose energy is capable of shining in Rome.” Marcus Tullius Cicero “New York City, the incomparable, the brilliant star city of cities, the forty-ninth state, a law unto itself, the Cyclopean Paradox, the inferno with no out-of-bounds, the supreme expression of both the miseries and the splendors of contemporary civilization, the Macedonia of the United States. It meets the most severe test that may be applied to the definit ion of a metropolis – it stays up all night. But also it becomes a small town when it rains.” John Gunther “If you live in New York, even if you’re Catholic, you’re Jewish.” Lenny Bruce “There is no question there is an unseen world; the question is, how far is it from midtown, and how late is it open?” Woody Allen “I am not afraid to admit that New York is the greatest city on the face of God’s earth. You only have to look at it from the air, from the river, from Father Duffy’s statue. New York is easily recognizable as the greatest city in the world, view it any way and every way – back, belly, and sides.” Brendan Behan “Is New York the most beautiful city in the world? It is not far from it.
    [Show full text]