NEW YORK Vom 22.05. – 01.06.2016
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Suitability of City-Owned and Leased Property for Urban Agriculture (LL 48 of 2011)
Suitability of City-Owned and Leased Property for Urban Agriculture (LL 48 of 2011) Date Created Borough Map Atlas Block Lot 10/10/2019 1 2 1 10/10/2019 1 2 2 10/10/2019 1 2 3 10/10/2019 1 2 23 10/10/2019 1 3 1 10/10/2019 1 3 2 10/10/2019 1 3 3 10/10/2019 1 6 1 10/10/2019 1 10 14 10/10/2019 1 12 28 10/10/2019 1 16 1 Page 1 of 10975 10/10/2021 Suitability of City-Owned and Leased Property for Urban Agriculture (LL 48 of 2011) Address Street Number Street Name Parcel Name 4 SOUTH STREET 4 SOUTH STREET SI FERRY TERMINAL 10 SOUTH STREET 10 SOUTH STREET BATTERY MARITIME BLDG MARGINAL STREET MARGINAL MTA SUBSTATION STREET 1 PIER 6 1 PIER 6 PIER 6 10 BATTERY PARK 10 BATTERY PARK BATTERY PARK PETER MINUIT PLAZA PETER MINUIT PETER MINUIT PLAZA/BATTERY PK PLAZA PETER MINUIT PLAZA PETER MINUIT PETER MINUIT PLAZA/BATTERY PK PLAZA 24 SOUTH STREET 24 SOUTH STREET VIETNAM VETERANS PLAZA 33 WHITEHALL STREET 33 WHITEHALL STREET WHITEHALL STREET WHITEHALL BOWLING GREEN PARK STREET 22 BATTERY PLACE 22 BATTERY PLACE PIER A / MARINE UNIT #1 Page 2 of 10975 10/10/2021 Suitability of City-Owned and Leased Property for Urban Agriculture (LL 48 of 2011) Agency Current Uses Total Area DOT;DSBS FERRY TERMINAL;NO 209215 USE;WATERFRONT PROPERTY DSBS IN USE-TENANTED;LONG-TERM 191502 AGREEMENT;WATERFRONT PROPERTY DSBS NO USE-NON RES STRC;TRANSIT 38800 SUBSTATION DSBS IN USE-TENANTED;FINAL COMMITMNT- 510025 DISP;LONG-TERM AGREEMENT;NO USE;FINAL COMMITMNT-DISP PARKS PARK 945425 PARKS PARK 39900 PARKS PARK 33600 PARKS PARK 35166 SANIT OFFICE 13214 PARKS PARK 22500 DSBS -
City-Owned Properties Based on Suitability of City-Owned and Leased Property for Urban Agriculture (LL 48 of 2011)
City-Owned Properties Based on Suitability of City-Owned and Leased Property for Urban Agriculture (LL 48 of 2011) Borou Block Lot Address Parcel Name gh 1 2 1 4 SOUTH STREET SI FERRY TERMINAL 1 2 2 10 SOUTH STREET BATTERY MARITIME BLDG 1 2 3 MARGINAL STREET MTA SUBSTATION 1 2 23 1 PIER 6 PIER 6 1 3 1 10 BATTERY PARK BATTERY PARK 1 3 2 PETER MINUIT PLAZA PETER MINUIT PLAZA/BATTERY PK 1 3 3 PETER MINUIT PLAZA PETER MINUIT PLAZA/BATTERY PK 1 6 1 24 SOUTH STREET VIETNAM VETERANS PLAZA 1 10 14 33 WHITEHALL STREET 1 12 28 WHITEHALL STREET BOWLING GREEN PARK 1 16 1 22 BATTERY PLACE PIER A / MARINE UNIT #1 1 16 3 401 SOUTH END AVENUE BATTERY PARK CITY STREETS 1 16 12 MARGINAL STREET BATTERY PARK CITY Page 1 of 1390 09/28/2021 City-Owned Properties Based on Suitability of City-Owned and Leased Property for Urban Agriculture (LL 48 of 2011) Agency Current Uses Number Structures DOT;DSBS FERRY TERMINAL;NO 2 USE;WATERFRONT PROPERTY DSBS IN USE-TENANTED;LONG-TERM 1 AGREEMENT;WATERFRONT PROPERTY DSBS NO USE-NON RES STRC;TRANSIT 1 SUBSTATION DSBS IN USE-TENANTED;FINAL COMMITMNT- 1 DISP;LONG-TERM AGREEMENT;NO USE;FINAL COMMITMNT-DISP PARKS PARK 6 PARKS PARK 3 PARKS PARK 3 PARKS PARK 0 SANIT OFFICE 1 PARKS PARK 0 DSBS FERRY TERMINAL;IN USE- 1 TENANTED;FINAL COMMITMNT- DISP;LONG-TERM AGREEMENT;NO USE;WATERFRONT PROPERTY DOT PARK;ROAD/HIGHWAY 10 PARKS IN USE-TENANTED;SHORT-TERM 0 Page 2 of 1390 09/28/2021 City-Owned Properties Based on Suitability of City-Owned and Leased Property for Urban Agriculture (LL 48 of 2011) Land Use Category Postcode Police Prct -
Prostitution
The Voice of the West Village WestView News VOLUME 14, NUMBER 10 OCTOBER 2018 $1.00 Duty to Warn: How Big Business Northwell Runs the Healthcare Industry Opens Suite of By Gary G. Kohls, MD the World. Around the time that the book was published, I was a small-town family practitioner still trying mightily to follow PART ONE—In this two-part series, Dr. Kohls explores the Hippocratic Oath, which I took back in 1968. I was also Doctor Offices how the intersection of big business and the pharmaceuti- still trying to honor my patient’s inalienable right to be fully cal, vaccine and medical device corporations have come to informed about the risks and benefits of any drug I was con- rule the healthcare industry. Part two of the series will ap- sidering prescribing before he or she consented to the prescrip- pear in the November issue of WestView. tion. It was time-consuming to follow those ethical principles. “Corporations should not be involved in any aspect of the Korten followed up with a sequel in 1999, titled “The democratic process. They should not be involved in educa- Post-Corporate World. Here is an excerpt that nicely sum- tion at any level. They should not be involved in healthcare. marizes what he was warning his readers about: They should not be involved in the administration of social “’When Corporations Rule the World’ told the new story as I had services. They should not be involved in the administration come to understand it: “Our relentless pursuit of economic growth of justice. -
The Voice of the West Village
The Voice of the West Village WestView News VOLUME 17, NUMBER 1 JANUARY 2021 $2.00 2020—The Return of the Depression? By George Capsis apartment construction in Manhattan came to a dead stop; you can easily tell pre- If you go online right now you can find half Depression apartment buildings—they are a dozen articles on the precipitous drop English Tudor. (English Tudor was con- in the New York City real-estate market sidered the rich man’s style.) Those on brought about by the pandemic. In reading the west side of Washington Square are them I encounter terms that are very famil- perhaps the largest and fanciest examples iar to me, which I discovered when apart- we have in the Village. In the very largest ment-hunting with my mother during the is the residence of the president of NYU. depths of the Depression. The bulk of the five story tenements that Now, when Dusty drives me up Sixth undulate over the five-borough landscape Avenue past the RCA building in which of the city were designed in what might be I worked for RCA a half-century ago, I called Renaissance architectural style, with am disconcerted to see the streets nearly heavy sheet metal roof cornices and large empty of office workers or even tourists. keystone heads over some of the windows— Yesterday I read that owners of the empty architecture you can find in Florence or office towers are thinking of converting Rome. I used to think this was due to the in- them into apartment buildings! Photo credit: Library of Congress. -
Past Village Award Winners 1991-2020
Past Village Award Winners 1991-2020 13th Street Repertory Company Barry Benepe Chez Brigitte (1997) 121 Charles Street Restoration Albert Bennett The Children’s Aid Society 171-173 MacDougal Street Facade Be Seated Christopher Park Alliance Restoration Bill Bowser Church of St. Luke’s-in-the-Fields 201 East 12th Street Renovation Biography Bookshop Church of the Ascension 34 Commerce Street Restoration The Bitter End Church of the Ascension Nave 6th Street and Avenue B Garden Bleecker Street Sitting Area Renovation Restoration 749 Washington Street Restoration Block Drug Store Cinema Village 81 Barrow Street Restoration Bonnie Slotnick Cookbooks Classic Stage Company 859-877 Washington Street Restoration Bowery Alliance of Neighbors Bowery Frank Collerius AIDS Memorial Theaters The Comedy Cellar Abingdon Square Park Restoration Bowne & Co., Inc. George Cominskie Alexander S. Onassis Center The Brant Foundation and Gluckman Cooper Union Public Programs Anglers & Writers Café Tang Architects Cornelia Street Restaurants Annisa Broadway Windows Corner Bistro Antholgy Film Archives Angelo Bruno Keith Crandell Aphrodisia Herb Shoppe C.O. Bigelow Pharmacy Merce Cunningham Marilyn Appleberg Café Loup Dinosaur Hill Arturo’s Resturant The Caring Community Doris Diether Mrs. Brooke Astor and the Vincent Caffe Reggio Kathy Donaldson Astor Foundation Steve Cannon Fedora Dorato Avignone Chemists Casa Italiana Zerilli-Marimo Dr. Rick's Village Flute and Sax Shop B & H Dairy Carmine Street Guitars State Senator Tom Duane Bagel Restaurant Lucy Cecere East Village Meat Market Bayard Condict Building Restoration Charles Lane Streetscape Charterhouse Edgar M. Bronfman Center for Bea Arthur Residence Antiques Jewish Student Life Bedford Barrow Commerce Block Cherry Lane Theatre Paul Egita Association Chess Forum El Faro Restaurant Past Village Award Winners 1991-2020 Elephant & Castle Grey Dog's Coffee LGBT Community Services Center Estate of Fred W. -
Brooklyn School of Languages, LLC BSL CLASSROOM LOCATION GUIDE ABINGDON SQUARE
BSL CLASSROOM LOCATION GUIDE ABINGDON SQUARE A BIT OF HISTORY FIRST! Abingdon Square Park is one of New York City's oldest parks, and at 0.25 acres (1,000 m2), one of its smallest. Abingdon Square Park shares its lineage with some of Greenwich Village’s earliest European landowners and social figures. It was named for a prominent eighteenth-century area resident, Charlotte Warren, who married Englishman Willoughby Bertie, the 4th Earl of Abingdon and received the land as a wedding gift from her father. Although most British place names in Manhattan were altered after the Revolutionary War, Abingdon Square retained its name due to the well-known patriotic sympathies of Charlotte and the Earl. The park is today maintained by the Abingdon Square Alliance, a community group that works in cooperation with the Department of Parks & Recreation. The park is still a vibrant center of neighborhood life with their Saturday greenmarket that has been bringing local farmers and purveyors to the West Village since 1994. Brooklyn School of Languages, LLC Email: [email protected] Phone: +1 (646) 341-1219 Social media: @brooklynschooloflanguages Website: www.brooklynschooloflanguages.com THE BARE ESSENTIALS **Find these on the map on page 1 Morning coffee Something sweet! - Tea & Sympathy** - Magnolia’s Bakery** - Starbucks Reserve Roastery - Van Leeuwens Ice Cream - Joe’s Coffee - Kobrick Coffee Co** Grocery stores & pharmacies - CVS Pharmacy Lunch options - Duane Reade - White Horse Tavern - Pastis** Nearest subway stations and lines - The Butcher’s Daughter - Christopher st. station (lines 1, 2) 7 min walk - Wild** - West 4th st. station (lines A, B, C, D, E) 11 min walk - Corner Bistro - 14 st. -
I'm Pleased to Present This Parent and Family Resource Guide For
RANKING MINORITY MEMBER DISTRICT OFFICE: JUDICIARY 322 EIGHTH AVENUE, SUITE 1700 INVESTIGATIONS & NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10001 GOVERNMENT OPERATIONS PHONE: (212) 633-8052 FAX: (212) 633-8096 COMMITTEES CODES ALBANY OFFICE: CULTURAL AFFAIRS, TOURISM, PARKS ROOM 413 & RECREATION LEGISLATIVE OFFICE BUILDING ALBANY, NEW YORK 12247 ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION PHONE: (518) 455-2451 HEALTH FAX (518) 426-6846 e-mail: [email protected] website: hoylman.nysenate.gov Dear Neighbor: I’m pleased to present this Parent and Family Resource Guide for residents of the 27th State Senate District. This guide will help you identify important benefits and services available to parents and families in our community. I hope you’ll find this guide useful when making decisions for your children and planning for the future. If you have any questions or comments, I encourage you to call me at 212-633-8052. Sincerely, Brad Hoylman State Senator 27th Senate District Office of New York State Senator Brad Hoylman 322 8th Avenue, Suite 1700 New York, NY 10001 Phone: (212) 633-8052 Fax: (212) 633-8096 Email: [email protected] Parent & Family Resource Guide Table of Contents Important Numbers........................................................................p. 1 Government Agencies State Government Agencies...................................................p. 3 City Government Agencies....................................................p. 4 Elected Officials........................................................................p. 8 Community Boards.................................................................p. -
Corey Johnson Bounces Back
The Voice of the West Village WestView News VOLUME 17, NUMBER 3 MARCH 2021 $2.00 Corey Johnson Bounces Back By George Capsis parade and the camera is on him, he throws have opinions about how that money is Oh wow, it was only just a short while himself into a few dance steps, and even a being spent, and he will express those ago I read with despair that Corey John- backflip, while beaming joyously. opinions just the way the current comp- son was dropping out of the race for mayor As the Speaker of the New York City troller, Scott Stringer, has been offering because of an extended bout of depression, Council I would catch him lecturing with opinions for months and months, knowing and then, bang, on February 18th I read in careful and compelling speech and think, he would run for mayor. the Times that he is thinking very seriously “Yes, yes, he will make a good mayor.” And But let me tell you of my first encounter about running for comptroller. Wow— I’d also think it was inevitable—no ques- with Corey (it is one of my best stories). great. tion—that Corey Johnson was going to be He was running for city council for the first That he suffered from crippling depres- our next mayor. But now as comptroller, he time and, unannounced, he rang my door- sion was news to me because he is known will just be counting the money. bell to introduce himself and his mission, Photo: Marc A. Hermann / MTA New York for his irrepressible ebullience. -
NYCHA in the Apartment Next Door
The Voice of the West Village WestView News VOLUME 15, NUMBER 11 NOVEMBER 2019 $1.00 NYCHA in the Apartment Next Door By George Capsis with other apartment buildings seeking to the tube with the rats through the night.) ish and rebuild all of the buildings to arrive rent to tenants willing and able to pay, and There is no question that massive public at the first neighborhood in New York that Below is an excellent history of U.S. public continue to pay, market rates, and then have housing does not work. The City Council and integrates incomes by law. housing by our gifted Architecture Editor, 30% of the apartments made available to current NYCHA management continue to I am a firm believer that laws designed to Brian Pape. The article was prompted by the New York’s two million permanently poor. make obsequious noises as they invite NYCHA correct a social inequity in one decade create now year-long discussion here in New York Most of the objections to this solution have activists to voice their solution, which is essen- social inequities of their own in the next— to take government out of the building and been prompted by the utter failure of the City tially tax the rich and fix our NYCHA. take rent control—so I'm anxious about maintaining of housing for the permanently to maintain public housing. (WNBC has a I am betting that the city will go ahead buildings with legally enforced integration. poor and to invite developers via a competi- podcast showing swarming rats running over a and carve out a plot on the Fulton housing The sprawl of NYCHA needs to be ended tive Request for Proposal (RFP ) to build kitchen sink and worst of all a baby on a night- campus and build New York’s first mixed and the buildings demolished so, OK, let’s apartment buildings that would compete ly feeding tube exhibiting scars from sharing income building and then go on to demol- have enforced 70-30 integration. -
Lenox Health Greenwich Village to Ramp up Local Vaccinations
The Voice of the West Village WestView News VOLUME 17, NUMBER 2 FEBRUARY 2021 $2.00 Lenox Health Greenwich Village to Ramp Up Local Vaccinations THE FINAL STAGES OF CONSTRUCTION as Lenox Health Greenwich Village readies the 10,000 square foot vaccination unit at their facility at 30 7th Ave. LHGV hopes to start administer- ing the COVID-19 vaccine as soon as possible. Photo by Bob Cooley. By Bob Cooley public very soon. Alex Hellinger, Executive Director of “Tomorrow, I will lay out our vaccination Lenox Health Greenwich Village, is head- plan to correct course and meet our goal of ing up the program and is optimistic about 100 million shots at the end of my first 100 the progress being made on the new unit, days as president,” stated President-Elect planning to see it open to Village resi- Joe Biden in his January 14 address. Lenox dents in the very near future. Health Greenwich Village is racing to fin- “What’s important to us at Lenox ish a new vaccination unit that will signifi- Health Greenwich Village, is that we take cantly aid in that national effort within our care of this community with anything and neighborhood. everything healthcare-related. Certainly, in The new 10,000 sq-ft. space will accom- a pandemic such as this, we are here to take modate 20 nurses’ stations for simultane- care of our community. ously administering the vaccine and a 70- At this point, we’ve tested over 15,000 seat waiting/observation area for patients; people for COVID. We are testing in our it boasts an efficient check-in system, patient service center, we’re testing in the social distancing, multiple air exchanges, emergency department and we are working HIMANSHU PATEL RECEIVES HIS FIRST OF TWO SHOTS, administered by nurse Jessica and HEPA filters. -
Composting in NYC, 2001
New York City Department of Sanitation Kevin P. Farrell Commissioner CompostingComposting inin NewNew YorkYork CityCity AA CompleteComplete ProgramProgram HistoryHistory Prepared by Bureau of Waste Prevention, Reuse and Recycling Robert Lange, Director August 2001 Table of Contents List of Tables...................................................................................................................................... 3 Abbreviations and Definitions .......................................................................................................... 3 Director’s Note .................................................................................................................................. 5 What Is Composting? ........................................................................................................................ 8 Two Models for Centralized Composting: Source Separated and Mixed Material........................ 9 Centralized Composting: Source-Separated Leaf and Yard Waste .................................... 9 Facility Siting.......................................................................................................................... 11 Facility Operations ................................................................................................................ 12 Distribution of Finished Compost ........................................................................................ 13 Future Directions for Leaf and Yard-Waste Composting ................................................... -
Burning Hope for Marriage for Art D’Lugoff, at Union Square Monday Evening, New Yorkers for Marriage Equality Held a Candlelight Vigil in Support of Gay Marriage
Koch gives ‘Precious’ a big plus, p. 30 Volume 79, Number 23 $1.00 West and East Village, Chelsea, Soho, Noho, Little Italy, Chinatown and Lower East Side, Since 1933 November 11 - 17, 2009 Smaller turnout at school hearing, but lots of anger BY ALBERT AMATEAU receive adequate notice of A second and final the two hearings. hearing last week on the “It’s bizarre that Department of Education’s the Greenwich Village plan to relocate Greenwich Middle School will not Village Middle School be in Greenwich Village,” from its crowded Village Keen Berger, a Village school building to a new Democratic district leader Financial District home and Community Board 2 attracted even fewer peo- member, told the Nov. 4 ple than the first sparsely hearing. Testifying for C.B. attended hearing the pre- 2, Berger said the board vious week. had unanimously resolved Only three people signed that 75 Morton St., a nearly up to testify at the 6 p.m. vacant state-owned build- Tues., Nov. 4, hearing on the ing, was the ideal location unpopular relocation plan. for the neighborhood mid- At the Oct. 29 hearing, six dle school. people testifi ed. “We need a middle school Elected officials and in our community, and we neighborhood advocates strongly object to moving said they were outraged at our only middle school to 26 moving the middle school Broadway,” Berger said. out of the Village. They Villager photo by J.B. Nicholas also contended they did not Continued on page 35 Burning hope for marriage For Art D’Lugoff, At Union Square Monday evening, New Yorkers for Marriage Equality held a candlelight vigil in support of gay marriage.