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The Occupy Wall Street Movement's Struggle Over Privately Owned
International Journal of Communication 11(2017), 3162–3181 1932–8036/20170005 A Noneventful Social Movement: The Occupy Wall Street Movement’s Struggle Over Privately Owned Public Space HAO CAO The University of Texas at Austin, USA Why did the Occupy Wall Street movement settle in Zuccotti Park, a privately owned public space? Why did the movement get evicted after a two-month occupation? To answer these questions, this study offers a new tentative framework, spatial opportunity structure, to understand spatial politics in social movements as the interaction of spatial structure and agency. Drawing on opportunity structure models, Sewell’s dual concept of spatial structure and agency, and his concept of event, I analyze how the Occupy activists took over and repurposed Zuccotti Park from a site of consumption and leisure to a space of political claim making. Yet, with unsympathetic public opinion, intensifying policing and surveillance, and unfavorable court rulings privileging property rights over speech rights, the temporary success did not stabilize into a durable transformation of spatial structure. My study not only explains the Occupy movement’s spatial politics but also offers a novel framework to understand the struggle over privatization of public space for future social movements and public speech and assembly in general. Keywords: Occupy Wall Street movement, privately owned public space (POPS), spatial opportunity structure, spatial agency, spatial structure, event Collective actions presuppose the copresence of “large numbers of people into limited spaces” (Sewell, 2001, p. 58). To hold many people, such spaces should, in principle, be public sites that permit free access to everyone. The Occupy Wall Street (OWS) movement, targeting the engulfing inequality in the age of financialization and neoliberalization, used occupation of symbolic sites to convey its message. -
Bowling Green Offices Building Designation Report
Landmarks Preservation Commission September 19, 1995, Designation List 266 LP-1927 BOWLING GREEN OFFICES BUILDING, 5-11 Broadway (aka 5-11 Greenwich Street), Manhattan. Built 1895-98; W. & G. Audsley, architects. Landmark Site: Borough of Manhattan Tax Map Block 13, Lot 5. On May 16, 1995, the Landmarks Preservation Commission held a public hearing on the proposed designation of the Bowling Green Offices Building and the proposed designation of the related Landmark Site (Item No. 2). The hearing had been duly advertised in accordance with the provisions of law. Eleven witnesses spoke in favor of designation, including Councilwoman Kathryn Freed and representatives of State Senator Catherine Abate, the New York Chapter of the American Institute of Architects, the Municipal Art Society, the New York Landmarks Conservancy, the Fine Arts Federation, and the Seaport Task Force of Community Board 1. No one spoke in opposition to designation. A representative of the owners took no position regarding the proposed designation but stated that the owners wanted to cooperate with the Commission. The Commission has received several letters and other statements in support of designation including a resolution from Community Board 1. Summary An enormous and beautifully crafted presence at the base of Broadway, facing Bowling Green and extending through the block to Greenwich Street, the seventeen- story Bowling Green Offices Building was designed and built in 1895-98 to be at the forefront of New York commercial towers in terms of its size, architectural style, and amenities. The architects were Scottish-born brothers William James and George Ashdown Audsley, whose fame rests largely on the more than twenty-five books they wrote on craftsmanship, decorative art, and related topics. -
Lower Manhattan
WASHINGTON STREET IS 131/ CANAL STREETCanal Street M1 bus Chinatown M103 bus M YMCA M NQRW (weekday extension) HESTER STREET M20 bus Canal St Canal to W 147 St via to E 125 St via 103 20 Post Office 3 & Lexington Avs VESTRY STREET to W 63 St/Bway via Street 5 & Madison Avs 7 & 8 Avs VARICK STREET B= YORK ST AVENUE OF THE AMERICAS 6 only6 Canal Street Firehouse ACE LISPENARD STREET Canal Street D= LAIGHT STREET HOLLAND AT&T Building Chinatown JMZ CANAL STREET TUNNEL Most Precious EXIT Health Clinic Blood Church COLLISTER STREET CANAL STREET WEST STREET Beach NY Chinese B BEACH STStreet Baptist Church 51 Park WALKER STREET St Barbara Eldridge St Manhattan Express Bus Service Chinese Greek Orthodox Synagogue HUDSON STREET ®0= Merchants’ Fifth Police Church Precinct FORSYTH STREET 94 Association MOTT STREET First N œ0= to Lower Manhattan ERICSSON PolicePL Chinese BOWERY Confucius M Precinct ∑0= 140 Community Plaza Center 22 WHITE ST M HUBERT STREET M9 bus to M PIKE STREET X Grand Central Terminal to Chinatown84 Eastern States CHURCH STREET Buddhist Temple Union Square 9 15 BEACH STREET Franklin Civic of America 25 Furnace Center NY Chinatown M15 bus NORTH MOORE STREET WEST BROADWAY World Financial Center Synagogue BAXTER STREET Transfiguration Franklin Archive BROADWAY NY City Senior Center Kindergarten to E 126 St FINN Civil & BAYARD STREET Asian Arts School FRANKLIN PL Municipal via 1 & 2 Avs SQUARE STREET CENTRE Center X Street Courthouse Upper East Side to FRANKLIN STREET CORTLANDT ALLEY 1 Buddhist Temple PS 124 90 Criminal Kuan Yin World -
SIM4C Bus Time Schedule & Line Route
SIM4C bus time schedule & line map SIM4C Annadale Via N Gannon Av Via Richmond Av View In Website Mode The SIM4C bus line (Annadale Via N Gannon Av Via Richmond Av) has 2 routes. For regular weekdays, their operation hours are: (1) Annadale Via N Gannon Av Via Richmond Av: 12:00 AM - 11:30 PM (2) Midtown Via Church St Via Madison Av: 4:00 AM - 7:00 PM Use the Moovit App to ƒnd the closest SIM4C bus station near you and ƒnd out when is the next SIM4C bus arriving. Direction: Annadale Via N Gannon Av Via SIM4C bus Time Schedule Richmond Av Annadale Via N Gannon Av Via Richmond Av Route 48 stops Timetable: VIEW LINE SCHEDULE Sunday 6:30 AM - 8:30 PM Monday 6:30 AM - 8:30 PM Central Park S/6 Av 128 Central Park S, Manhattan Tuesday 10:20 AM - 11:30 PM W 57 St/Av Of the Americas Wednesday 12:00 AM - 11:30 PM 52 W 57 St, Manhattan Thursday 12:00 AM - 11:30 PM 5 Av/E 55 St Friday 12:00 AM - 11:30 PM 700 5th Avenue, Manhattan Saturday 12:00 AM - 8:50 PM 5 Av/W 48 St 582 5 Ave, Manhattan 5 Av/W 40 St 424 5th Avenue, Manhattan SIM4C bus Info Direction: Annadale Via N Gannon Av Via Richmond 5 Av/W 32 St Av 320 5 Ave, Manhattan Stops: 48 Trip Duration: 100 min E 23 St/Broadway Line Summary: Central Park S/6 Av, W 57 St/Av Of East 23rd Street, Manhattan the Americas, 5 Av/E 55 St, 5 Av/W 48 St, 5 Av/W 40 St, 5 Av/W 32 St, E 23 St/Broadway, Park Av South/E Park Av South/E 22 St 22 St, Broadway/E 13 St, Broadway/Waverly Pl, 278 Park Ave S, Manhattan Broadway/W Houston St, Broadway/Broome St, Broadway/Chambers St, Broadway/Barclay St, Broadway/E 13 St Broadway/Cortlandt St, Broadway/Rector St, 853 Broadway, Manhattan Broadway/Morris St, Gowanus Exp./Lorraine St (S.B.), Gowanus Exp./ 29 St. -
817 Broadway Building
DESIGNATION REPORT 817 Broadway Building Landmarks Preservation Designation Report Designation List 512 Commission 817 Broadway Building LP-2614 June 11, 2019 DESIGNATION REPORT 817 Broadway Building LOCATION Borough of Manhattan 817 Broadway (aka 817-819 Broadway, 48-54 East 12th Street) LANDMARK TYPE Individual SIGNIFICANCE 817 Broadway is a 14-story store-and-loft building designed by the prominent American architect George B. Post. Constructed in 1895- 98, this well-preserved Renaissance Revival- style structure represents the type of high-rise development that occurred on Broadway, south of Union Square, in the last decade of the 19th century. Landmarks Preservation Designation Report Designation List 512 Commission 817 Broadway Building LP-2614 June 11, 2019 817 Broadway, 1905 Irving Underhill, Museum of the City of New York LANDMARKS PRESERVATION COMMISSION COMMISSIONERS Lisa Kersavage, Executive Director Sarah Carroll, Chair Mark Silberman, General Counsel Frederick Bland, Vice Chair Kate Lemos McHale, Director of Research Diana Chapin Cory Herrala, Director of Preservation Wellington Chen Michael Devonshire REPORT BY Michael Goldblum Matthew A. Postal, Research Department John Gustafsson Anne Holford-Smith Jeanne Lutfy EDITED BY Adi Shamir-Baron Kate Lemos McHale PHOTOGRAPHS Sarah Moses Landmarks Preservation Designation Report Designation List 512 Commission 817 Broadway Building LP-2614 June 11, 2019 3 of 21 817 Broadway Building Deborah Glick, as well as from the Municipal Art Manhattan Society of New York and the Metropolitan -
USQ-14Th Street Vision Plan Press Release 01.19.21 Final
Union Square Partnership Unveils Sweeping New Vision for Manhattan’s Union Square-14th Street The Union Square-14th Street District Vision Plan will increase public space around the Square by 33 percent The Vision Plan is the culmination of a two-year visioning process, working with community members, local business leaders, urban designers, and transportation experts New York, NY (January 19, 2021) - The Union Square Partnership today announced the release of the Union Square-14th Street District Vision Plan (“Vision Plan”), an ambitious new proposal for the future of the Union Square-14th Street neighborhood that will result in a dramatic 33 percent increase in public space. “We are proud to unveil a Vision Plan that places the needs of the Union Square-14th Street community at the forefront by promoting openness, equity, safety, and accessibility. The ultimate goal here is for parkgoers to know they have arrived at a place that is special,” said Jennifer Falk, Executive Director of Union Square Partnership. “Initiated as a response to the proposed L train shutdown, this Vision Plan evolved as COVID-19 upended our world, and with it, our relationship with public space. More open space, safer pedestrian and cyclist travel, better transit, and more outdoor seating and greenery - all of these changes are called for in this plan and will benefit our community immeasurably as we chart the district’s next chapter.” Designed in collaboration with Marvel, the Vision Plan is the culmination of a two-year-long process working with community members, local business leaders, urban designers, landscape architects, transportation experts, and City and State agency partners. -
115 Broadway
CLINTON STREET SUFFOLK STREET NORFOLK STREET HUDSON STREET BARUCH DRIVE LUDLOW STREET ORCHARD STREET ESSEX STREET GREENWICH STREET ELDRIDGE STREET ALLEN STREET WASHINGTON STREET FORSYTH STREET Walker CHRYSTIE STREET Park PS 20 MORTON STREET Nativity Our 609 St W HOUSTON STREET ELIZABETH STREET STANTON STREET DOWNING STREET BOWERY Mission Lady of Green 225 Fire Anthony E HOUSTON STREET MULBERRY STREET Sch WEST STREET Sorrows -wich Varick Dept ES Puck MOTT STREET City-As-Sch 599 B'way Ch & Sch 149 Bldg Cascade PS 721 6TH AVENUE 200 Wooster 295 Ctr LEROY STREET Varick 594 B'way Laf 262 Mott LES HS LOWER CLARKSON STREET STANTON STREET 395 Hudson 584 B'way PS 140 US EAST Federal 580 B'way Patrick's Building PRINCE STREET Post BROADWAY LAFAYETTE STREET Cathedral Oce 575 270 Museum SIDE 180 75 Prince Laf RIVINGTON STREET 185 B'way Contemp W HOUSTON STREET Varick PRINCE STREET Art 375 Hudson KING STREETVarick 130 PRINCE STREET Prince 120 PS 142 WILLIAMSBURG BRIDGE Wooster St 175 CHARLTON STREET 560 B'way Patrick 350 Varick 561 550-560 Hudson 10 Hud Sq Scholastic Sch 170 Varick 110 Greene 557 B'way Prince Washington Hotel RIVINGTON STREET 345 10 Hud Sq 555 B'way Hudson 160 Varick O 415 W 546 B'way SoHo VARICK STREET 30 B'way Suites WILLIAMSBURG BRIDGE Pier 40 St John's SULLIVAN STREET 330 Vandam 161 Center WEST BROADWAY 333 AofA THOMPSON STREET Hudson 233 536 340 West Hudson SPRING STREET 73 DELANCEY STREET LEWIS STREET Spring 532 F D R DRIVE UPS 150 AVENUE OF THE AMERICAS Spring PS GREENWICH STREET Varick SPRING STREET B'way 325 325 VANDAM STREET -
WCDOT Sysmapbrch
C C ro to n F a lls R d R D L O C V R E - L 2 L 2 S T y e To Poughkeepsie d d To Carmel Bowl l al R 77 R V Park-and-Ride L e TLC e n PART2 o k c o i 6N PART2 v a a n l e W L U l P d l a o S R n n o i t r a d w Mahopac e w S d h l 6 a c Village t a d c r s B R A Center d k O Har o R dsc bbl e ra T S o L L r E V O L r E e B l l t t PART2 i u S o M r c LEGEND p a S p PUTNAM o h d a Baldwin HOW TO RIDE M R Regular Service w 0 llo Somers COUNTY o Jefferson 77 Place FOR YOUR SAFETY & COMFORT H Commons Lincolndale ill 16 Express/Limited-Stop ks k Valley 0 1. Arrive at the bus stop at least 5 minutes Pee 6 Service 202 PART2 Bee-Line buses belong to everyone, so please help us to take good care of them! Shrub Oak 16 Memorial Park St early to avoid missing your bus. E Main Rd 118 L Part-time Service us d 12 0 c N o iti 9 t T v R C D S e To ensure the safety and comfort of all Please be courteous to those riding with you: R l N O G l E R 77 O D i Thomas Je#erson Elementary School L l O 16 u 77 k l Shrub Oak r 2. -
References 2019 New.Pdf
NOTE: This operates best in free Acrobat Reader (download here). To search in this document, open in Acrobat Reader. On the toolbar on the top, please click the magnifying glass icon or go to Edit/Find, and search for location, name of church, or type of work. Alternately, please use the links in the Table of Contents or the Bookmarks tab to navigate through the states and countries. United States Alabama Kentucky North Dakota Alaska Louisiana Ohio Arizona Maine Oklahoma Arkansas Maryland Oregon California Massachusetts Pennsylvania Colorado Michigan Rhode Island Connecticut Minnesota South Carolina Delaware Mississippi South Dakota D.C. Missouri Tennessee Florida Montana Texas Georgia Nebraska Utah Hawaii Nevada Virginia Idaho New Hampshire Vermont Illinois New Jersey Washington Indiana New Mexico West Virginia Iowa New York Wisconsin Kansas North Carolina Wyoming In addition to the United States Asia Canada Europe ® America’s Premier Stained Glass Studi0&® ® United States Alabama CITY CLIENT W0RK C0MPLETED Anniston First Baptist Church of Saks Repair/Protective Covering Anniston First Methodist Church New Window(s) Anniston First Presbyterian Church New Window(s) Auburn Auburn Methodist Church New Window(s) Bessemer St. Aloysius Roman Catholic Church New Window(s) Birmingham Asbury United Methodist Church New Window(s) Birmingham Barber Residence New Window(s) Birmingham Briarwood Presbyterian Church New Window(s) Birmingham Cahaba Heights United Methodist Church New Window(s) Birmingham East Lake Methodist Church New Window(s) Birmingham Hunter Street Baptist Church New Window(s) Birmingham Independent Presbyterian Church New Window(s) Birmingham Kirkwood by the River Retirement Home New Window(s) Birmingham Meadowbrook Baptist Church New Window(s) Birmingham Mountain Brook Baptist Church New Window(s) Birmingham Mountain Brook Presbyterian Church New Window(s) Birmingham Oscar Wells Mausoleum New Window(s) Birmingham Riverchase United Methodist Church New Window(s)/Repair/ Protective Covering Birmingham St. -
New York City Subway O N
k a r ORCHARD Wakefield PELHAM t m BEACH Wakefield BAY A 241 St PARK WESTCHESTER B A 2 Y C EASTCHESTER THE BRONX H P ES O TE T Eastchester R R S T B Nereid Av A 33 W R V 2 Dyre Av O 2•5 A A S D 5 H Riverdale I W Woodlawn N A 233 St G Y T 2•5 Baychester New York City Subway O N Av B CO-OP L V M 5 225 St 222 ST CITY D O h t with bus and railroad connections S r • o 2 5 H O N - L o U r t Van Cortlandt Park e 219 St BAYCHESTER M • THE Key 242 St VAN Woodlawn 2 5 Y V 1 A CORTLANDT P A I K 4 E N W W K Y CITY P D The subway operates 24 hours a Local service only D RIVERDALE PARK Gun Hill Rd R Gun Hill Rd BRONX Y U A Williams E A W O B Y ISLAND L S P • O 5 d Rush hour line K RK 2 5 V W day, but not all lines operate at all I Bridge A K E A R All trains stop (local S P P P W N N O M A B H T A n extension E times. Call our Travel Information N R H D L D VAN CORTLANDT Mosholu Pkwy E Norwood I LE E and express service) O T D L P E G E A S D E 238 St A N I u Center at 511 for more information 4 A 205 St D R 231 ST P N C V B L U 1 A E V Pelham Bay Park in English or Spanish (24 hours) or Normal service N A o H A I D L I A N KINGSBRIDGE I A N P Y Burke Av 6 V W B S S ask an agent for help in all other R IR S Additional express • R E N 2 5 D D Accessible E 231 St R languages (6AM to 10PM). -
Mount Vernon East Pre-Nomination Study
New York State Departments of State and Environmental Conservation Brownfield Opportunity Areas Program Mount Vernon East Metro North Train Station Area Step 1 Pre-Nomination Study September 2010 City of Mount Vernon, NY Department of Planning and Community Development Pre-nomination Summary Page In the place of a pre-nomination study, we are presenting a community profile, several maps detailing the conditions of the area, and a previous study, released in March 2009, titled Mount Vernon, Action Plan. The action plan study, based on several previous studies in addition to new research, illustrates possibilities for future revitalization of the downtown central business district. The Plan has identified three key issues: 1. Employment Generators 2. Building Restoration & Adaptive Re-use 3. Sustainable Practices T he plan describes manageable changes and new directions that can promote short-term, mid-term, and long-term achievements. In addition, future possibilities to implement and fund the proposals were outlined. Over the past ten years, there have been several studies and proposals to improve Mount Vernon’s central downtown business district. Studying Mount Vernon has been appealing because of the potential of building stock, location, utilities, and transportation infrastructure that are already in place. Small and big proposals have been made to rejuvenate the socioeconomic conditions of the city. Mount Vernon has been involved in the New York State Empire Zone Program, the city has received Community Development Block Grants, and has been active in developing new multi-family residential spaces in the community. Mount Vernon’s City Planning Board has been vital in promoting the Residential Rehabilitation Program, and securing Section 8 funding for the community. -
MTA New York City Subway
k a r ORCHARD Wakefield PELHAM t Wakefield–241 St m BEACH Wakefield BAY A 241 St Subway PARK WESTCHESTER 2 EASTCHESTER THE BRONX Bus - Bx39 P CITY O T Eastchester Bee-Line-OP R S CO T B Nereid Av 33 W R 2 Dyre Av 40 41 42 43 O Woodlawn Norwood–205 St 2•5 A W 254 ST A S D 5 H Riverdale Subway I W Subway Woodlawn Metro-North Railroad N Van Cortlandt Pk–242 St A 233 St G Y T Bus - Bx16 Bx34 Bus - Bx10 Bx16 Bx28 2•5 Baychester Pelham Bay Park O Subway N Bx30 Bx34 225 ST Av V Subway B CO-OP A L Bus - Bx9 Bee-Line V M 5 W CITY 225 St 222 ST O D O h T Bus - Bx5 Bx8 Bx12 4 20 21 t L S r R • ACO D A o 2 5 Bee-Line H R B Bx12 Select Bus Service O N - L N 1 1C 1T 1W 2 3 o U NI r O Bx29 QBx1 t T Van Cortlandt Park e 219 St A BAYCHESTER S THE A MTA New York City Subway M O • 242 St 2 V V VAN Woodlawn 5 Bee-Line B Y A V A 1 CORTLANDT P A I K 4 45 O N W BRONX W CITY D P Y Gun Hill Rd D PARK D RKE RIVERDALE Gun Hill Rd U L Y Williams A E A W O B ISLAND with bus and railroad connections Y L A S P • O 5 d K RK 2 5 W I Bridge AV E A S P W R P W N A B n H N E RTON D D VAN CORTLANDT Mosholu Pkwy E Norwood I LE O T D L V PELHAM PK E G E A S D E A 238 St A u N I 4 A 205 St D R P 231 ST N C V B L U 1 A Pelham Bay Park E V V N A o D L WARING H A I KINGSBRIDGE I E A N A N I A P Y Burke Av A 6 V W B S R IR Y S STC S E • R E Key Marble Hill–225 St N 2 5 D 231 St L D E R I Bedford Pk Blvd Bedford Pk Blvd HE N H A W Subway 1 O B Buhre Av Lehman College B•D ST T Spuyten LE Westchester Square d The subway operates 24 hours a 2 E 25 ST Allerton Av 6 D Bus - Bx7 Bx9 Bx20 Marble 4 Pelham Pkwy R ID Duyvil Metro-North Marble Hill East Tremont Av Local service only Port 2•5 R M n day, but not all lines operate at all Hill 5 D 225 St Botanical Garden Subway Rush hour line Washington Metro-North Railroad H times.