Lincoln Square • Central Park • Columbus Circle

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Lincoln Square • Central Park • Columbus Circle Upper West Side LINCOLN SQUARE • CENTRAL PARK • COLUMBUS CIRCLE Streets Verdi Square, E5 West 82 Street, A4-7 Ballet School of Lincoln Square, B4 Bethesda Fountain and Terrace, F11 Luce Nature Observatory, C10 Collegiate School, C4 Ethical Culture Fieldston School, J8 Holy Trinity Lutheran Church, H8 Juilliard School of Music, J6 Mt. Pleasant Christian Academy, B6 PS 199, G4 Studio Building, D7 West 57 Street, M4-12 West 83 Street, A4-7 Beacon High School, K4 Bow Bridge, E10 Maine Monument, L9 Columbus Academy, D6 Evelyn Apartments, C6 Holy Trinity RC Church, A5 Metropolitan Opera House, J6 Museum of American Folk Art, H7 PS 252, L4 The Shops at Columbus Circle, L8 Amsterdam Avenue, C5-L5 Key West 58 Street, M4-12 West Drive, A9-G9 Beacon Hotel, D5 Bowling Green, G9 The Mall, G11 Columbus Circle, L8 Excelsior Hotel, B7 Horticultural Society of New York, M11 Mitzi E. Newhouse Theater, J5 Museum of Arts & Design, M8 PS 811M, A4 Theodore Roosevelt Park, B7 Broadway, C4, G5, K7, M9 West 59 Street, L4 West End Avenue, C3-L3 Beacon Theater, E5 Cedar Hill, C12 Mineral Springs Café, G10 Columbus Statue, L8 Fiorello H. LaGuardia HS of Music & Art & the Hotel Des Artistes Apartments, H8 NY Pub. Lib. for the Performing Arts, J5 New World Club, E4 River School, J4 Time Warner Building, M8 Central Park South, L11 accessible Transit Police West 60 Street, L4-7 Beit Rabban School, G8 Carousel, J10 Naumburg Bandshell, F11 Comfort Inn Central Park West, F7 Performing Arts, J5 Hotel Olcott, E8 New York State Theater, K6 New York Athletic Club, L10 Riverside Park, A2, E2 Triad Theater, F6 entrance & exit District Office Central Park West, D8-H8 TPD Subway station and West 61 Street, K4, K7 Points of Interest Belleclaire Hotel & Hostel, D4 Central Park Zoo and Wildlife Obelisk, B12 Community Christian Church, A8 Firehouses: A6, C5, H5, M9 Inn New York City, F4 Paul Milstein Plaza, J6 New-York Historical Society, D8 Riverside Public Library, J5 Trump International Hotel & Towers, L8 District 1 Columbus Avenue, C6-L6 exits H West 62 Street, K8 20th Police Precinct, A6 Beresford Apartments, A8 Conservation Center, J12 Pilgrim Hill, E12 Computer School, D6 First Baptist Church, B4 Inter-Continental Hotel, L11 Vivian Beaumont Theater, J5 NY Institute of Technology/ Riverside Tower Hotel, B3 Ukrainian Orthodox Church, A5 T Columbus Circle, L8 Gate House A P E West 63 Street, K4, K8 62nd St & Broadway Theatre, K7 Berkley Hotel, E5 Chess & Checkers House, J11 The Pond, L12 Congregation Habonim, H8 First Friends Preschool, E4 IS 44, D6 Walter Reade Theatre, J5 Metropolitan Center, L7 Rizzoli, M12 Upper West Side, D5 elevator L East Drive, C12-G12 to street or stairways ID West 64 Street, J4, J8 78th St Theatre Lab, C4 Blessed Sacrament Church & School, F6 Cherry Hill, F10 Promenade, E1 Congregation Rodeph Sholom, A8 Fisk Building, M8 International Preschool, A8 Lincoln Plaza Cinema, K7 New York Society for Ethical Culture, J8 Robert Louis Stevenson High School, E7 Urban Assembly Sch for Media Studies, H5 R East Tower Drive, J3 building level B West 65 Street, J4-8 84th St Six Cinema, A4 Bradford Hotel, G4 Conservatory Water, E12 Ramble, C10 Congregation Shearith Israel Fordham University Law School, K6 JASA Senior Center, H8 Lincoln Square Neighborhood Center, J4 Newsweek Building, M8 Rocking Horse Nursery School, G6 The Walt Disney Company, H7 Eleventh Avenue, M3 West 66 Street, H4-8 All Angels Church, B4 Broadway American Hotel, C4 Cop Cot, L11 Robert Burns Statue, H11 Spanish-Portuguese Synagogue, G8 Fordham University Lincoln Center Campus, K6 Jazz at Lincoln Center, L8 Lincoln Square Synagogue, G5 Nine W 57 Street, M12 Rose Center for Earth and Space West 59th St Recreation Ctr and Pool, L4 Freedom Place, G2 Subway route West 67 Street, H8 Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre, K5 Buckingham Hotel, M11 Croquet Green, G10 Rumsey Playfield, F12 CUNY Honors College, H7 Fourth Universalist Church, D8 Jewish Community Center, D5 Lincoln Square Theaters IMAX, G6 Nippon Club, M10 (Hayden Planetarium), B8 West End Church, F4 BROADWAY =A =B =1 Henry Hudson Pkwy, A1, E2, H1 symbol West 68 Street, G2, G8 Alwyn Court Apartments, M10 Calhoun Lower School, E6 Dairy, J12 Shakespeare Garden, B9 Dakota Apartments, E8 Grace & St. Paul Lutheran Church, F6 Jewish Guild for the Blind, J8 Lincoln Towers, G3-4 On the Avenue Hotel, C4 Rutgers Presbyterian Church, E4 West End Collegiate Church, C4 Joe DiMaggio Highway M103 337 301 175 520 West 69 Street, G2, G8 American Bible Society, K7 Calhoun School, B3 Dairy Visitor Center, J11 251 213Summit Rock, A8 520 Dante Park, J7 Greenmarkets: D6, E5, M7 Jewish77 Guild for the Blind Educ. Svcs, H7 Looking Glass Theatre, M6 Parc Lincoln Hotel, D5 St. Agnes Public Library, A5 West End Synagogue, G5 B51 M15 B51 (Twelfth Av), M2 110 ST Bus routes and West 70 Street, G4-8 American Broadcasting Company, H7 Calvary Baptist Church, M10 Delacorte Theater/NY Shakespeare Festival, B10 Century Apartments, K8 Dorchester Towers, G5 Hamilton House Senior Center, E6 John Jay College of Criminal Justice/ Lucerne Hotel, B5 Parc Vendome, M7 St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center, M6 West Side Institutional Synagogue, D6 terminal Ninth Avenue, M6 WEST 85 ST numbers with West 71 Street, F4-8 American Folk Art Museum, H7 Cami Hall, M10 Dene, H12 Chatsworth Apartments, F2 Dorilton Apartments, F5 Hampshire House, L11 CUNY, L5, M5 Majestic Apartments,WEST F8 85 ST Parkside School, E7 St. Moritz on the Park Hotel, L11 WestArthur Side Repertory Ross Theater, B4 M Manhattan Richard Tucker Square, H6 West 72 Street, F3-8 American Museum of Natural History, C7 Caribbean334 Cultural Center, M6 300 East Green, F12 250 Children's Day Treatment Ctr & School,200 F4 Drisha Inst. for Jewish Education, J7 Harkness Plaza, K7 100 JHS 44, D6 Mandarin Oriental Hotel, L8 12 Phillips Club, H5 St. Paul the Apostle Church, L6 West SidePinetum YMCA/Hotel, J8 B Brooklyn M103 directional arrows Mannes M103 Buses run both ways if 515 WEST SIDE HIGHWAY 514 517 Riverside Boulevard, G2 WEST CENTRAL PARK 127 West 73 Street, E4-8 American Musical & Dramatic Academy, E4 Carlebach Synagogue, B3 Gill, D10 Children's2342 Museum of Manhattan, A4 Elaine Kaufman Cultural Center at Abraham Hayden Hall, B6 Kenilworth Apartments, D8 Manhattan Day School, D3 Police Precinct, A6 St. Thomas Church Choir School, M9 Westpark Hotel, M8 79 ST no arrow is shown Riverside Drive, B3, E2 College of West 74 Street, E4-8 American Red Cross, H5 Carnegie Hall, M10 Great Lawn, A10 Christ & St. Stephen Episcopal Church, G6 Goodman House, H5 Hearst Bldg, M8 Landmark School, M9 Manhattan/Hunter Science HS, H5 Post Offices: A6, G6, L7 Salisbury Hotel, M11 Winston Prep School, D7 AREA OF Seventh Avenue, M10 Music THIS MAP E West 75 Street, D4-8 Amsterdam Houses, K4 CBS Studios, M4 Hallett Nature Sanctuary, L12 Christ Church, F5 Lucy Moses School for Music and Helmsley Park Lane Hotel, L12 Langham Apartments, E8 Manhattan Theatre Lab HS, H5 Professional Children's School, L6 San Remo Apartments, E8 Wyndham Hotel, M12 FDR DR I 144 65 Street Transverse, J10 Congregation 59 ST Point of Interest BuildingV numbers West 76 Street, D4-8 Ansonia,The, E4 Center School, G4 Hans Christian Andersen, E12 Church for All Nations, M6 Dance, H5 Helmsley Windsor Hotel, M11 Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, J6 Margaret Mead Green, B7 Project Find, F5 Schwab House, E3 York Preparatory School, G7 I 505 Louis R 72 Street Transverse, F11 2321 B'nai Israel 498 # Tourist attraction 8 AV 5 AV 1 AV West 77 Street, C4-8 Apthorp Apartments, C4 Central Park, D10 Heckscher Ballfields, J10 Church of Jesus Christ of L D Saints, J7 Merkin Concert Hall, H5 Henry Hudson Hotel, M7 Alice Tully Hall (closed to late 2008), J6 Martin Luther King Jr. High School, H5 Project Hargrave Senior Center, F6 Second Church of Christ Scientist, H8 11 AV D 498 57 241 42 ST Hospital 79 Street Transverse, C11 301 255 219 Brandeis H.S 101 B 357 Chaim BROADWAY Public art West 78 Street, C4-6 ArcLight Theatre, F5 Alice in Wonderland, D12 Heckscher Playground, K10 Church of the Good Shepherd, H5 Special Music School of America, H5 Heschel School, L4 Avery Fisher Hall, J6 Medical Arts Center Hospital, M12 Promenade (Riverside Park), A1 Seventy-Ninth St Boat Basin, C1R T I Sherman Square, G5 D L S West 79 Street, C4-6 Art Students League, M9 Bank Rock Bay, C9 Lake, E9 WEST 84 ST Clearview Cinemas, K7 Empire Hotel, K7 HS for Arts, Imagination & Inquiry, H5 Damrosch Park, K6 Metropolitan Museum of Art, A12 Promenade Theatre, D4 Steinway Hall, M11 E A WEST 84 ST Sixth Avenue, M11 23 ST Pedestrian walkway West 80 Street, B4-6 ASCAP Building, J7 Balto Statue, H12 Literary Walk, H11 Coalition School for Social Change, M9 Esplanade Hotel, E3 HS for Law, Advocacy & Community Justice, H5 Guggenheim Bandshell, K5 MS 245, D6 PS 87, C5 Stephen Gaynor School, E7 E Tenth Avenue, M5 250 220 167 Rodeph Shalom or overpass 328 300 2 14 ST West 81 Street, B4-7 Astor Apartments, D4 116 Belvedere Castle, B10 Loeb Boathouse, D11 Coliseum Books, M8 Essex House, L10 Holiday Inn Midtown, M6 Josie Robertson Plaza, J6 Milburn Hotel, D4 PS 191, L5 Stephen Wise Free Synagogue, G7 495 Congregation 495 Thelonius S. Monk Circle, K4 M5 498 PS 9 Day School 2318 HUDSON ST Ohav Shalom HOUSTON ST 0 250 500 feet BROADWAY CANAL ST 84th St Planetarium Congregation 50 100 150 meters 483 483 1 2 3 42301 Six Cinema 5 Post Office 6 7 Rodeph Sholom 8 9 10 11 12 HENRY HUDSON PKWY 337 307 285 221 480 175 93 For bus and subway information call 511 or visit www.mta.info WEST 83 ST WEST 83 ST Summit © 2015 Metropolitan Transportation Authority Map M13 Design: Michael Hertz Associates, NYC 300 262 200 100 70 Community Rock 324 M7 M11 2 470 Children’s 477 2296 W Firehouse 475 Christian PS 811M M104 Museum R E E Church C of Manhattan R A S E A A T T IO M7 M11 N 441 International 2281 Holy Trinity 462 D P A T 223 460 Preschool R H 77 225 Promenade 317 301 165 249 RC Church M10 IV WEST 82 ST WEST 82 ST E Great Metropolitan 300 262 200 20th Police 100 2 457 455 98 Ukrainian Precinct 219 Museum of Art 452 2278 Lawn St.
Recommended publications
  • 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.
    [Show full text]
  • 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.
    [Show full text]
  • William Burnet Tuthill Collection
    WILLIAM BURNET TUTHILL COLLECTION William Burnet Tuthill Collection Guide Overview: Repository: Inclusive Dates: Carnegie Hall Archives – 1891 - 1920 Storage Room Creator: Extent: William Burnet Tuthill 1 box, 42 folders; 1 Scrapbook (10 X 15 X 3.5), 5 pages + 1 folder; 44 architectural drawings Summary / Abstract: William Burnet Tuthill is the architect of Carnegie Hall. He was an amateur cellist, the secretary of the Oratorio Society, and an active man in the music panorama of New York. The Collection includes the questionnaires he sent to European theaters to investigate about other theaters and hall, a scrapbook with clippings of articles and lithographs of his works, and a series of architectural drawings for the Hall and its renovations. Access and restriction: This collection is open to on-site access. Appointments must be made with Carnegie Hall Archives. Due to the fragile nature of the Scrapbook, consultation could be restricted by archivist’s choice. To publish images of material from this collection, permission must be obtained in writing from the Carnegie Hall Archives Collection Identifier & Preferred citation note: CHA – WBTC – Q (001-042) ; CHA – WBTC – S (001-011) ; CHA – AD (001-044) William Burnet Tuthill Collection, Personal Collections, Carnegie Hall Archives, NY Biography of William Burnet Tuthill William Burnet Tuthill born in Hoboken, New Jersey, in 1855. He was a professional architect as well as passionate and amateur musician, a good cellist, and an active man in the music scene of New York. He studied at College of the City of New York in 1875 and after receiving the Master of Arts degree, started his architectural career in Richard Morris Hunt’s atelier (renowned architect recognized for the main hall and the façade of the Metropolitan Museum on Fifth Avenue, the Charity Home on Amsterdam Avenue – now the Hosteling International Building- and the pedestal of the Statue of Liberty).
    [Show full text]
  • Elevator Interior Design
    C AMB RIDGE A select portfolio of architectural mesh projects for new or refurbished elevator cabs, lobbies and high-traffic spaces featuring Cambridge’s metal mesh. ARCHITECTURAL MESH Beautiful, light-weight and durable, architectural mesh has been prized by architects and designers since we first wove metal fabric for the elevator cabs in Mies van der Rohe’s Seagram Building in 1958. And it’s still there today. Learn more about our elite line of elegant panels in stainless steel, brass, copper and aluminum. Carnegie Hall, New York City Elegant burnished aluminum panels lift Carnegie Hall’s elevator interiors to another level. Installed by EDI/ECI in concert with Iu + Biblowicz Architects, Comcast Center, Philadelphia, PA Cambridge’s Sawgrass pattern adds When designing the a refined and resilient interior to world’s tallest green this refurbished masterpiece. building, Robert A.M. © Gbphoto27 | Dreamstime.com Stern Architects added style and sustainability with Empire State Building, Cambridge mesh. New York City Classically outfitted Beyer, Blinder & with the chic Ritz pattern, the flexible Belle Architects stainless steel fabric integrates the modernized the lobby and elevators with a smooth landmark and seamless design. skyscraper’s elevator cabs with Cambridge’s Stipple mesh. Installed by the National Elevator Cab & Door Co., the dappled brushed aluminum surface stands up to the traffic and traditions of this legendary building. Victory Plaza, Dallas, TX TFO Architecture’s YAHOO!, Sunnyvale, CA expansive mixed-use project in the center Gensler architects of downtown selected Cambridge’s incorporates one of Silk mesh to clad Cambridge’s most elevators at Yahoo’s popular rigid mesh Silicon Valley fabrics.
    [Show full text]
  • Murdoch's Global Plan For
    CNYB 05-07-07 A 1 5/4/2007 7:00 PM Page 1 TOP STORIES Portrait of NYC’s boom time Wall Street upstart —Greg David cashes in on boom on the red hot economy in options trading Page 13 PAGE 2 ® New Yorkers are stepping to the beat of Dancing With the Stars VOL. XXIII, NO. 19 WWW.NEWYORKBUSINESS.COM MAY 7-13, 2007 PRICE: $3.00 PAGE 3 Times Sq. details its growth, worries Murdoch’s about the future PAGE 3 global plan Under pressure, law firms offer corporate clients for WSJ contingency fees PAGE 9 421-a property tax Times, CNBC and fight heads to others could lose Albany; unpacking out to combined mayor’s 2030 plan Fox, Dow Jones THE INSIDER, PAGE 14 BY MATTHEW FLAMM BUSINESS LIVES last week, Rupert Murdoch, in a ap images familiar role as insurrectionist, up- RUPERT MURDOCH might bring in a JOINING THE PARTY set the already turbulent media compatible editor for The Wall Street Journal. landscape with his $5 billion offer for Dow Jones & Co. But associ- NEIL RUBLER of Vantage Properties ates and observers of the News media platform—including the has acquired several Corp. chairman say that last week planned Fox Business cable chan- thousand affordable was nothing compared with what’s nel—and take market share away housing units in the in store if he acquires the property. from rivals like CNBC, Reuters past 16 months. Campaign staffers They foresee a reinvigorated and the Financial Times. trade normal lives for a Dow Jones brand that will combine Furthermore, The Wall Street with News Corp.’s global assets to Journal would vie with The New chance at the White NEW POWER BROKERS House PAGE 39 create the foremost financial news York Times to shape the national and information provider.
    [Show full text]
  • Real Estate Record and Builders Guide Founded March 21, 1888, by CLINTON W
    Real Estate Record and Builders Guide Founded March 21, 1888, by CLINTON W. SWEET. Devoted to Real Estate, Building Construction and Building Management in the Metropolitan District Published Every Saturday by THE RECORD AND GUIDE COMPANY FRANK E. PERLEY, President and Editor; W. D. HAD SELL, Vice-President; J. W. FRANK, Secretary-Treasurer. Bntered as second olasa matt« Norember 8, I8T>, at Uia Po«t Office at New York. N. Y., nnder tlie Act of Uarcb S. I8T8. Copyright, 1919, by The Record and Guide Company. 119 West 40th Street, New York (Telpehone: Bryant «0«). VOLL XLV NEW YORK, JANUARY 10, 1920 «.00 A THAR NO. 2 (2764) 2O0. A COPT AdTertisinp Index AdTertisinr Index Page A B See Electric Elevator Co. TABLE OF CONTENTS Newins, Harvey B SS 4th Cover New York Edison Co."," The!!!" 59 Ackerly, Orville B., & Son..2(1 Cover SECTION I. New York Title Mortgage Co.. Acme Cabinet Co., Inc 62 The no Acme Service Corporation 45 Editorials 37 Adler, Ernest N 2d Cover Niewenhous Bros., Inc 61 A. J. Contracting Co., Inc 62 Readers' Comment on Current Topics 38 Noyes Co., Chas. F... .Front "cover ' Alliance Realty Co 36 Lockwood Committee Offers Bills Affecting Obelisk Waterproofing Co.... 56 Ames & Co 2d Cover Amy & Co., A. V 2a Cover Realty 39 n^p*"!, '^P^l?'"''"™ Corp..2d civer Anderson & Co., James S 36 O Reilly & Dahn 2d Cover Armstrong, John 2d Cover Governor Smith Will Send Message on Housing 39 Orr & Co., John C......... .."Il Aspromonte & Son, L. S 59 Sales and Conveyances in Manhattan and Bronx Payton, Jr., Co., Philip A.
    [Show full text]
  • Rethinking School Lunch a Charity That Supports a Long Is- CLASSIFIEDS ______24 Land Children’S Hospital
    20111010-NEWS--0001-NAT-CCI-CN_-- 10/7/2011 9:02 PM Page 1 INSIDE REPORT EDUCATION TOP STORIES Meet the brains Cultural revolution: steering the billions to There’s a new No.1 be spent on college expansions institution in town ® STORY, PAGE 3; LIST, PAGE 23 PAGE 17 VOL. XXVII, NO. 41 WWW.CRAINSNEWYORK.COM OCTOBER 10-16, 2011 PRICE: $3.00 Tech campus bids shake up race New plans from Carnegie Mellon, NYU, and Palo Alto. opment Corp. “We’re expecting to Yo, Manhattan, The charge by the local schools get a very robust set of responses.” Columbia give city chance to award 2nd site and Carnegie Mellon, which is NYU is teaming up with more where did all your partnering with a major production than a dozen domestic and interna- gas pumps go? flown under the radar. studio in Brooklyn, opens the door tional partners in higher education BY DANIEL MASSEY But now three institutions— for Mayor Michael Bloomberg to and business to propose an interdis- PAGE 2 New York University, Columbia possibly select two winners. ciplinary campus in downtown While Cornell and Stanford uni- University and Carnegie Mellon “We’re extremely encouraged by Brooklyn. It would seek to capital- MTV. AOL. Clear versities have painted the town red University—are unveiling details of the level of enthusiasm that has See NEW BIDS on Page 29 Channel. It’s Act 3 to advance their proposals to build prospective campuses at other sites been demonstrated so far by both a $1 billion tech campus on Roo- around the city,adding a twist to an local universities and nonlocal uni- THE OTHER TECH SITE Nancy for Bob Pittman sevelt Island,other prospective bid- ongoing dogfight between the en- versities,” said Seth Pinsky, presi- Zimpher on SUNY’s big deal Page 11 PAGE 3 ders in the city’s competition have gineering powerhouses from Ithaca dent of the city’s Economic Devel- Baker Hostetler: the law firm that Bernie Madoff built Feds say PAGE 2 hedge fund star made it up Corey Ribotsky’s meteoric rise leaves BUSINESS LIVES a trail of ruined GOTHAM GIGS backers in its wake Pumpkin-art biz grows so fast, it’s scary P.
    [Show full text]
  • Central Park Spring Guide
    This is a spring like no other. When the world is in disarray, the natural wonder of a new season unfolding becomes a simple joy and a reminder of nature’s profound power to regenerate and revive. The Central Park Conservancy has been New York’s advocate for Central Park for the last four decades. And now, our staff’s role has become even more important as we work to keep the Park clean, safe, and healthy. A vibrant Central Park cleans the air for New Yorkers, provides a place for mental and physical well-being, and brings us together — even when we are kept apart. This spring, we ask you to join us in celebrating the simple miracles of life: the blooming magnolia, the sweeping vistas from a miniature castle, and the community that is New York. IN THIS GUIDE We look forward to a time when we can be together 2 A Note to Park-Goers in the Park. Until then, we hope our Spring Guide 3 Get to Know Central Park’s Spring Blooms provides you with a taste of the season. 4 Preparing for Spring in Conservatory Garden 5 Central Park Activities 10 Central Park Quiz 11 Central Park Map 2 A NOTE TO PARK-GOERS New York City has seen its share of crises, yet despite all we’ve lived through, New Yorkers remain resilient. In times of turmoil, Central Park has always been here, as a respite, an oasis, or simply a quiet place to escape when we feel overwhelmed. This holds true even as the City navigates the coronavirus outbreak.
    [Show full text]
  • Our 5 Columbus Circle Center Is Located Within Blocks from Central Park, Carnegie Hall and Time Warner Center
    Our 5 Columbus Circle Center is located within blocks from Central Park, Carnegie Hall and Time Warner Center. The center is also within one block from the N, Q, R W, A, C, B, D and 1 subway lines. It is a five minute walk to E subway line. Our Center boasts an extraordinary, sophisticated and luxurious collection of original artwork and spectacular views of Columbus Circle. It is a minute walk to the renown Central Park. The 5 Columbus Circle has 30 fully furnished and wired offices, two conference rooms, and a large pantry / break room serving freshly brewed Starbucks Coffee and a continental breakfast every morning. All of Bevmax’s offices are equipped with state-of-the art telephone and high-speed internet access. Bevmax makes it easy for you to be in your new office, complete with telephone, Internet, secretarial, receptionist, mail and conference room services, allowing you to concentrate on your business! ! Our 5 Columbus Circle is located within blocks from Central Park, Carnegie Hall, and Time Warner Center. The center is also within one block from the N, Q, R, W, A, C, B, D and 1 subway lines. It is a five minute walk to E subway line. Our Center boasts an extraordinary, sophisticated and luxurious collection of original artwork and spectacular views of Columbus Circle. It is a minute 485 Madison Avenue walk to the renown Central Park. 7th Floor New York, NY 10022 The 5 Columbus Circle Center has 30 fully furnished and wired offices, two conference rooms, and a large pantry / break room serving freshly brewed Starbucks Coffee and a continental breakfast every morning.
    [Show full text]
  • New York Fourth Quarter 2001 Analyzes: CBD Office Retail Apartments Suburban Office Industrial Local Economy Real a Publication of the Global New York Vol
    NATIONAL REAL ESTATE INDEX M M ETRO New York ETRO Vol. 32 Fourth Quarter 2001 M M ARKET ARKET Analyzes: Reports: CBD Office Property Prices Retail Property Rents Apartments Sector Forecasts Suburban Office Demographic Highlights Industrial Job Formation Trends Local Economy Economic Base Profile Educational Achievement Tax Structure F F Quality of Life Factors ACTS ACTS A publication of the National Real Estate Index Global Real Analytics New York Vol. 32 ✯ The National Real Estate Index extends its deepest sympathies and condolences to the victims of the World Trade Center, Pentagon and Pennsylvania tragedies and their families and friends. We would also like to extend our gratitude to the rescue workers, medical personnel and other professionals and citizens who have come to the aid of those affected. Report Format This report is organized as follows. Section I costs and availability are detailed in Section VI. provides a snapshot that highlights the key eco- A series of other important factors, including nomic, demographic and real estate-related retail sales trends and international trade, are findings of the study. Sections II through IX reported in Section VII. Local and state fiscal provide an in-depth look (generally in a tabular policies, including taxes and federal spending, format) at the key economic, demographic, pub- are highlighted in Section VIII. Several key lic policy, and quality of life factors that can quality-of-life considerations are summarized in affect the demand for real estate. Section IX. In Section II, recent population trends are In Section X, local market price, rent and capi- reported. Section III analyzes the local eco- talization rate trends for the preceding 12 months nomic base and current labor force and job for- are reported.
    [Show full text]
  • Leseprobe 9783791384900.Pdf
    NYC Walks — Guide to New Architecture JOHN HILL PHOTOGRAPHY BY PAVEL BENDOV Prestel Munich — London — New York BRONX 7 Columbia University and Barnard College 6 Columbus Circle QUEENS to Lincoln Center 5 57th Street, 10 River to River East River MANHATTAN by Ferry 3 High Line and Its Environs 4 Bowery Changing 2 West Side Living 8 Brooklyn 9 1 Bridge Park Car-free G Train Tour Lower Manhattan of Brooklyn BROOKLYN Contents 16 Introduction 21 1. Car-free Lower Manhattan 49 2. West Side Living 69 3. High Line and Its Environs 91 4. Bowery Changing 109 5. 57th Street, River to River QUEENS 125 6. Columbus Circle to Lincoln Center 143 7. Columbia University and Barnard College 161 8. Brooklyn Bridge Park 177 9. G Train Tour of Brooklyn 195 10. East River by Ferry 211 20 More Places to See 217 Acknowledgments BROOKLYN 2 West Side Living 2.75 MILES / 4.4 KM This tour starts at the southwest corner of Leonard and Church Streets in Tribeca and ends in the West Village overlooking a remnant of the elevated railway that was transformed into the High Line. Early last century, industrial piers stretched up the Hudson River from the Battery to the Upper West Side. Most respectable New Yorkers shied away from the working waterfront and therefore lived toward the middle of the island. But in today’s postindustrial Manhattan, the West Side is a highly desirable—and expensive— place, home to residential developments catering to the well-to-do who want to live close to the waterfront and its now recreational piers.
    [Show full text]
  • SPRING 10 Alice TULLY HALL and the Juilliard School / City College of NEW YORK School of Architecture / FRANK SINATRA School OF
    Prsrt STD U.S. POSTAGE THE STEEL INSTITUTE OF NEW YORK THE ornamental metal INSTITUTE OF NEW YORK paid 211 EAST 43RD STREET, SUITE 804 PUBLISHED BY THE STEEL INSTITUTE OF NEW YORK AND THE ORNAMENTAL METAL INSTITUTE OF NEW YORK NEW YORK NY 10017 PERMIT NO. 161 LANCASTER, PA SPRING 10 ALICE Tully HALL AND THE JUILLIARD SCHOOL / CITY COLLEGE OF NEW YORK SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE / FRANK sinatra SCHOOL OF THE arts / NEW YORK LAW SCHOOL / 41 COOPER SQUARE / ONE JACKSON SQUARE / PUBLISHED BY THE standard HOTEL / MONROE HIGH SCHOOL ANNEX CONTENTS EDITOR’S NOTE SPRING 10 Test of strength 1 OVER THE YEARS, OUR introduce its own testing is EDITOR’S NOTE building codes have expanded unlikely to reduce them. Since beyond their traditional focus on virtually every structural material 2 AliCE Tully Hall and life safety to include requirements must undergo strength testing, THE JUILLIARD SCHOOL for social initiatives such as it’s reasonable to ask why steel energy conservation, accessibility isn’t also at risk of testing fraud. 8 for the disabled, and historic Because of how it is produced, City College of New York preservation under their regulatory steel is able to be certified and SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE umbrella. Given this evolution, verified as conforming to the 14 it is disturbing to find that one required shape, size, composition, Frank Sinatra SChool of the most fundamental of and strength before it’s ever OF THE Arts code concerns—validating the delivered to a job site. Two strength of structural materials— separate inspections provide this 20 is dominating industry headlines.
    [Show full text]