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General Info.Indd
General Information • Landmarks Beyond the obvious crowd-pleasers, New York City landmarks Guggenheim (Map 17) is one of New York’s most unique are super-subjective. One person’s favorite cobblestoned and distinctive buildings (apparently there’s some art alley is some developer’s idea of prime real estate. Bits of old inside, too). The Cathedral of St. John the Divine (Map New York disappear to differing amounts of fanfare and 18) has a very medieval vibe and is the world’s largest make room for whatever it is we’ll be romanticizing in the unfinished cathedral—a much cooler destination than the future. Ain’t that the circle of life? The landmarks discussed eternally crowded St. Patrick’s Cathedral (Map 12). are highly idiosyncratic choices, and this list is by no means complete or even logical, but we’ve included an array of places, from world famous to little known, all worth visiting. Great Public Buildings Once upon a time, the city felt that public buildings should inspire civic pride through great architecture. Coolest Skyscrapers Head downtown to view City Hall (Map 3) (1812), Most visitors to New York go to the top of the Empire State Tweed Courthouse (Map 3) (1881), Jefferson Market Building (Map 9), but it’s far more familiar to New Yorkers Courthouse (Map 5) (1877—now a library), the Municipal from afar—as a directional guide, or as a tip-off to obscure Building (Map 3) (1914), and a host of other court- holidays (orange & white means it’s time to celebrate houses built in the early 20th century. -
(212) 792-0300 [email protected]
LIST OF APPROVED CONTRACTORS April 2015 Construction Manager S. T. Rud Construction Corp. Tom Duffe 1 Bryant Park (212) 257-6550 New York, NY 10036 [email protected] John Gallin & Son, Inc. Mark A. Varian 102 Madison Avenue – 9th Floor (212) 252-8900 New York, NY 10016 [email protected] StructureTone Inc. David Leitner 770 Broadway – 9th Floor (212) 481-6100 New York, NY 10003 [email protected] Hunter Roberts Interiors Joseph Martinez 225 Liberty Street – 6th Floor (212) 792-0300 New York, NY 10281 [email protected] Petretti & Associates Lawrence Petretti 149 Madison Ave, 3rd Floor (212) 259-0433 New York, NY 10016 [email protected] J. T. Magen & Co. Maurice Regan 44 West 28th Street – 11th Floor (212) 790-4200 New York, NY 10001 [email protected] Cross Management Corporation John Fleming 10 East 40th Street – Suite 1200 (212) 922-1110 New York, NY 10016 [email protected] Icon Interiors Inc. Jonathan Bennis 307 7th Ave. – Suite 203 (212) 675-9180 New York, NY 10001 [email protected] Turner Interiors [Turner Construction Company] Bert Rahm 375 Hudson Street – 6th Floor (212) 229-6043 New York, NY 10014 [email protected] James E. Fitzgerald, Inc. John Fitzgerald 252 West 38th Street, 10th Floor (212) 930-3030 New York, NY 10018 [email protected] Clune Construction Company Tommy Dwyer The Chrysler Center (646) 569-3220 405 Lexington Avenue – 27th Floor [email protected] New York, NY 10174 Electrical Contractors Schlesinger Electrical Contractors, Inc. Alan Burczyk 664 Bergen St. (718) 636-3944 Brooklyn, NY 11238 [email protected] Star Delta Electric LLC Randy D’Amico 17 Battery Pl #203 (212) 943-5527 New York, NY 10004 [email protected] Fred Geller Electrical, Inc. -
Annual Procurement Report Fiscal Year 2016 – 2017
Andrew M. Cuomo, Governor RuthAnne Visnauskas, Commissioner/CEO Annual Procurement Report Fiscal Year 2016 – 2017 For the Period Commencing November 1, 2016 and Ending October 31, 20171 January 25, 2018 NEW YORK STATE HOUSING FINANCE AGENCY STATE OF NEW YORK MORTGAGE AGENCY NEW YORK STATE AFFORDABLE HOUSING CORPORATION STATE OF NEW YORK MUNICIPAL BOND BANK AGENCY TOBACCO SETTLEMENT FINANCING CORPORATION 641 Lexington Avenue Ι New York, NY 10022 212-688-4000 Ι www.nyshcr.org 1 Although AHC’s fiscal year runs from April 1st through March 31st, for purposes of this consolidated Report, AHC’s procurement activity is reported using a November 1, 2016 – October 31, 2017 period, which conforms to the fiscal period shared by four of the five Agencies. NEW YORK STATE HOUSING FINANCE AGENCY STATE OF NEW YORK MORTGAGE AGENCY NEW YORK STATE AFFORDABLE HOUSING CORPORATION STATE OF NEW YORK MUNICIPAL BOND BANK AGENCY TOBACCO SETTLEMENT FINANCING CORPORATION Annual Procurement Report For the Period Commencing November 1, 2016 and Ending October 31, 2017 Annual Procurement Report Index SECTION TAB Agencies’ Listing of Pre-qualified Panels…………………………..……………………………….1 Summary of the Agencies’ Procurement Activities………………………………………..………. 2 Agencies’ Consolidated Procurement and Contract Guidelines (Effective as of December 15, 2005, Revised as of September 12, 2013)…………………………………....3 Explanation of the Agencies’ Procurement and Contract Guidelines………………………………4 TAB 1 Agencies’ Listing of Pre-qualified Panels TAB 1 Agencies’ Listing of Pre-Qualified Panels Arbitrage Rebate Services Pre-qualified Panel of the: ▸ New York State Housing Finance Agency - BLX Group LLC - Hawkins, Delafield & Wood LLP - Omnicap Group LLC ▸ State of New York Mortgage Agency ▸ State of New York Municipal Bond Bank Agency ▸ Tobacco Settlement Financing Corporation - Hawkins, Delafield & Wood LLP Appraisal and Market Study Consultant Pre-qualified Panel of the: ▸ New York State Housing Finance Agency - Capital Appraisal Services, Inc. -
STARRETT-LEHIGH BUILDING, 601-625 West 26Th Street, Borough of Manhattan
Landmarks Preservation Commission October 7, 1986; Designation List 186 LP-1295 STARRETT-LEHIGH BUILDING, 601-625 west 26th Street, Borough of Manhattan. Built 1930-31; Russell G. and Walter M. Cory, architects; Yasuo Matsui, associate architect; Purdy & Henderson, consulting engineers. Landmark Site: Borough of Manhattan Tax Map Block 672, Lot 1. On April 13, 1982, the Landmarks Preservation Commission held a public hearing on the proposed designation as a Landmark of the Starrett-Lehigh Building, and the proposed designation of the related Landmark Site (Item No. 20). The hearing was continued to June 8, 1982 (Item No. 3). Both hearings had been duly advertised in accordance with the provisions of law. Four witnesses spoke in favor of designation, and a letter supporting designation was read into the record. Two representatives of the owner spoke at the hearings and took no position regarding the proposed designation. DESCRIPTION AND ANALYSIS The Starrett-Lehigh Building, constructed in 1930-31 by architects Russell G. and walter M. Cory with Yasuo Matsui as associate architect and Purdy & Henderson as consulting engineers, is an enormous warehouse building that occupies the entire block bounded by West 26th and 27th Streets and 11th and 12th Avenues. A cooperative venture of the Starrett Investing Corporation and the Lehigh Valley Railroad, and built by Starrett Brothers & Eken, the structure served originally as a freight terminal for the railroad with rental manufacturing and warehouse space above. A structurally complex feat of engineering with an innovative interior arrangement, the Starrett-Lehigh Building is also notable for its exterior design of horizontal ribbon windows alternating with brick and concrete spandrels. -
In Re JDS Uniphase Corporation Securities Litigation 02-CV-01486
1 Joseph J. Tabacco, Jr . (75484) Christopher T. Heffelfinger (118058) 2 Michael W. Stocker (179083) BERMAN DeVALERIO PEASE 3 TABACCO BURT & PUCILLO 425 California Street, Suite 2100 4 San Francisco, CA 94104 Telephone: (415) 433-3200 5 Facsimile: (415) 433-6382 Email: jtabacco@bermanesq .com 6 Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] 7 Liaison Counsel for Lead Plaintiff Connecticut 8 Retirement Plans and Trust Fund s 9 Barbara J. Hart Jonathan M. Plasse 10 Louis Gottlieb Lisa Buckser-Schulz 11 David J. Goldsmith Jon Adams 12 LABATON SUCHAROW & RUDOFF LLP 100 Park Avenue 13 New York, NY 10017-5563 Telephone: (212) 907-0700 14 Facsimile: (212) 818-0477 Email: [email protected] 1 5 Email: [email protected] Email : [email protected] 16 Email: lbuckser@labalon .com Email : dgoldsmith@labaton .com 17 Email: [email protected] 18 Lead Counsel for Lead Plaintiff Connecticut Retirement Plans and Trust Funds 19 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COUR T 20 NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNI A 2 1 22 IN RE JDS UNIPHASE CORPORATION Master File No . C 02-1486 CW SECURITIES LITIGATION 23 Class Action This Document Relates to: All Actions 24 CERTIFICATE OF SERVIC E 25 26 27 28 [C-02-1486 CW] CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE 1 CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE 2 I, Antoinette Kratenstein, declare that I am over the age of 18 years and not a party to thi s action. My business address is 100 Park Avenue, New York, New York 10017. On November 4 4, 2005, I served the following documents : 1 . LEAD PLAINTIFF'S REPLY TO MOTION FOR CLASS CERTIFICATIO N 6 I AND FOR APPOINTMENT OF CLASS REPRESENTATIVE AND CLASS COUNSEL ; 7 MEMORANDUM OF POINTS AND AUTHORITIES IN SUPPORT THEREOF ; and 8 2. -
Cities Service Building, First Floor Interior
Landmarks Preservation Commission June 21, 2011; Designation List 443 LP-2442 CITIES SERVICE BUILDING, FIRST FLOOR INTERIOR, consisting of the main lobby spaces and fixtures and components of these spaces, including but not limited to, wall and ceiling surfaces, floor surfaces, stairs leading to basement lobby and second floor, vestibules, shop fronts, information kiosk, entrance doors, revolving door enclosures, elevator doors, grilles, railings, lighting fixtures, and signs; 70 Pine Street (aka 66-76 Pine Street, 2-18 Cedar Street, 171-185 Pearl Street), Manhattan. Built 1930-32; Clinton & Russell, Holton & George, architects. Landmark Site: Borough of Manhattan Tax Map Block 41, Lot 1 On May 10, 2011, the Landmarks Preservation Commission held a hearing on the proposed designation of the Cities Service Building, First Floor Interior (Item No. 2). The hearing was duly advertised according to provisions of law. Six people spoke in favor of designation, including representatives of the owners, Manhattan Community Board 1, the Historic Districts Council, and the New York Landmarks Conservancy. Summary The first floor of the 66-story Cities Service Building contains one the most impressive office building lobbies in New York City. Designed by Clinton & Russell, Holton & George in 1930-32, it is a superb example of the Art Deco style, with stunning marble walls and floors, molded plaster ceilings and cast aluminum details that express the original owner’s role in the production and delivery of energy. The lobby has four entrances, divided equally between Pine and Cedar Streets. To compensate for a deeply sloping site, the east portals open to spacious vestibules that incorporate wide staircases that rise to the first floor and descend to the basement lobby. -
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 -
CITIES SERVICE BUILDING, 70 Pine Street (Aka 66-76 Pine Street, 2-18 Cedar Street, 171-185 Pearl Street), Manhattan
Landmarks Preservation Commission June 21, 2011; Designation List 443 LP-2441 CITIES SERVICE BUILDING, 70 Pine Street (aka 66-76 Pine Street, 2-18 Cedar Street, 171-185 Pearl Street), Manhattan. Built 1930-32; Clinton & Russell, Holton & George, architects. Landmark Site: Borough of Manhattan Tax Map Block 41, Lot 1. On May 10, 2011, the Landmarks Preservation Commission held a hearing on the proposed designation as a Landmark of the Cities Service Building and the proposed designation of the related Landmark Site (Item No. 1). The hearing was duly advertised according to provisions of law. Six people spoke in favor of designation, including representatives of the owners, Manhattan Community Board 1, the Historic Districts Council, and the New York Landmarks Conservancy. Summary The former Cities Service Building at 70 Pine Street is a 66-story skyscraper, rising from a trapezoidal site bounded by Pine Street, Cedar Street, and Pearl Street. An icon of the lower Manhattan skyline, the building’s shaft terminates in a slender pinnacle crowned by an illuminated lantern and stainless steel spire. At the time of completion in 1932, this Art Deco style tower was the tallest structure in lower Manhattan, and at 952 feet, the third tallest structure in the world. Commissioned by a major American corporation, it was an expression of the owner’s success, escalating real estate costs, and the current zoning code that required buildings to diminish in mass as they rise. The Cities Service Company was chartered by Henry L. Doherty in 1910, and quickly grew to become one of the largest corporations in the United States, controlling approximately 150 energy firms in 38 states, including numerous oil and power suppliers. -
Skyscrapers and District Heating, an Inter-Related History 1876-1933
Skyscrapers and District Heating, an inter-related History 1876-1933. Introduction: The aim of this article is to examine the relationship between a new urban and architectural form, the skyscraper, and an equally new urban infrastructure, district heating, both of witch were born in the north-east United States during the late nineteenth century and then developed in tandem through the 1920s and 1930s. These developments will then be compared with those in Europe, where the context was comparatively conservative as regards such innovations, which virtually never occurred together there. I will argue that, the finest example in Europe of skyscrapers and district heating planned together, at Villeurbanne near Lyons, is shown to be the direct consequence of American influence. Whilst central heating had appeared in the United Kingdom in the late eighteenth and the early nineteenth centuries, district heating, which developed the same concept at an urban scale, was realized in Lockport (on the Erie Canal, in New York State) in the 1880s. In United States were born the two important scientists in the fields of heating and energy, Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790) and Benjamin Thompson Rumford (1753-1814). Standard radiators and boilers - heating surfaces which could be connected to central or district heating - were also first patented in the United States in the late 1850s.1 A district heating system produces energy in a boiler plant - steam or high-pressure hot water - with pumps delivering the heated fluid to distant buildings, sometimes a few kilometers away. Heat is therefore used just as in other urban networks, such as those for gas and electricity. -
Bfm:978-1-56898-652-4/1.Pdf
Manhattan Skyscrapers Manhattan Skyscrapers REVISED AND EXPANDED EDITION Eric P. Nash PHOTOGRAPHS BY Norman McGrath INTRODUCTION BY Carol Willis PRINCETON ARCHITECTURAL PRESS NEW YORK PUBLISHED BY Princeton Architectural Press 37 East 7th Street New York, NY 10003 For a free catalog of books, call 1.800.722.6657 Visit our website at www.papress.com © 2005 Princeton Architectural Press All rights reserved Printed and bound in China 08 07 06 05 4 3 2 1 No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner without written permission from the publisher, except in the context of reviews. The publisher gratefully acknowledges all of the individuals and organizations that provided photographs for this publi- cation. Every effort has been made to contact the owners of copyright for the photographs herein. Any omissions will be corrected in subsequent printings. FIRST EDITION DESIGNER: Sara E. Stemen PROJECT EDITOR: Beth Harrison PHOTO RESEARCHERS: Eugenia Bell and Beth Harrison REVISED AND UPDATED EDITION PROJECT EDITOR: Clare Jacobson ASSISTANTS: John McGill, Lauren Nelson, and Dorothy Ball SPECIAL THANKS TO: Nettie Aljian, Nicola Bednarek, Janet Behning, Penny (Yuen Pik) Chu, Russell Fernandez, Jan Haux, Clare Jacobson, John King, Mark Lamster, Nancy Eklund Later, Linda Lee, Katharine Myers, Jane Sheinman, Scott Tennent, Jennifer Thompson, Paul G. Wagner, Joe Weston, and Deb Wood of Princeton Architectural Press —Kevin Lippert, Publisher LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA Nash, Eric Peter. Manhattan skyscrapers / Eric P. Nash ; photographs by Norman McGrath ; introduction by Carol Willis.—Rev. and expanded ed. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references. ISBN 1-56898-545-2 (alk. -
Atomic Energy Commission
FEDERAL REGISTER VOLUME 30 • NUMBER 106 Thursday, June 3, 1965 • Washington, D.C. Pages 7307-7364 Agencies in this issue— Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service Atomic Energy Commission Civil Service Commission Coast Guard Consumer and Marketing Service Federal Aviation Agency Federal Communications Commission Federal Home Loan Bank Board Federal Maritime Commission Federal Power Commission Fish and Wildlife Service Immigration and Naturalization Service Interstate Commerce Commission Land Management Bureau Securities and Exchange Commission Small Business Administration Detailed list of Contents appears inside. Announcing a New Statutory Citations Guide How to Find U.S. Statutes and U.S. Code Citations This pamphlet contains typical legal refer them to make the search. Additional ence situations which require further citing. finding aids, some especially useful in Official published volumes in which the citing current material, also have been citations may be found are shown along included. Examples are furnished at per side each reference— with suggestions as tinent points and a list of reference titles, to the logical sequence to follow in using with descriptions, is carried at the end. Price: 10 cents Compiled by Office of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Service, General Services Administration [Published by the Committee on the judiciary, House of Representatives] Order from Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C., 20402 Published daily, Tuesday through Saturday (no publication on Sundays, Mondays, or FEHERALMREGISTER on the day after an official Federal holiday), by the Office of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Service, General Services Administration (mail address National Area Code 202 \ , 193« ¿jp Phone 963-3261 Archives Building, Washington, D.C. -
NY Skyscrapers : Über Den Dächern Von New York City
Dirk Stichweh Fotografien von Jörg Machirus Scott Murphy SKYSCRAPERS ÜBER DEN DÄCHERN VON NEW YORK CITY PRESTEL München London New York INHALTSVERZEICHNIS 5 Vorwort 6 Die Geschichte der New Yorker Wolkenkratzer - Eine kleine Zeitreise DOWNTOWN SKYSCRAPERS 14 Einleitung 28 60 Wall Street 48 30 Park Place 16 Trump Building 30 70 Pine Street 50 Barclay-Vesey Building 18 Bankers Trust Company 32 One Chase Manhattan Plaza 52 World Trade Center Building 34 120 Wall Street (Twin Towers) 19 Bank of New York Building 35 Park Row Building 54 One World Trade Center 22 Standard Oil Building 36 New York by Gehry 60 World Financial Center 23 One New York Plaza 38 Municipal Building 62 West Street Building 24 55 Water Street 42 56 Leonard Street 63 One Liberty Plaza 26 20 Exchange Place 44 Woolworth Building 64 Equitable Building MIDTOWN SKYSCRAPERS 68 Einleitung 116 General Electric Building 157 Time-Life Building 70 Flatiron Building 118 Helmsley Building 158 XYZ Buildings 72 Metropolitan Life Tower 120 383 Madison Avenue 160 WR. Grace Building 74 Metropolitan Life North Building 122 JPMorgan Chase World 161 Fred F. French Building 78 New York Life Building Headquarters 162 500 Fifth Avenue 79 One Penn Plaza 124 Waldorf Astoria Hotel 164 Bank of America Tower 80 Empire State Building 126 Seagram Building 166 4 Times Square 86 American Radiator Building 130 Lever House 168 New York Times Tower 88 Lincoln Building 132 432 Park Avenue 170 McGraw-Hill Building 89 Chanin Building 134 Four Seasons Hotel 172 Paramount Building 90 MetLife Building 135 IBM