116 St-Columbia University 2 Map © City of New York

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

116 St-Columbia University 2 Map © City of New York Neighborhood Map ¯ 556 Manhattanville 2168 3219 Health Center Sheltering Arms 30 29 368 601 2401 St. Nicholas 2406 3200 Playground Amsterdam Bus Depot Metropolitan M5 Park St. Nicholas Baptist Church LTD M5 439 401 399 301 LTD R 12 W 126 Street Playground South ive 552 rs 567 11 W 128 Street St. Nicholas Houses M5 id W 128 Street M5 e Convent Avenue D r Old Broadway iv e 559 M2 Riverside Drive Riverside 1361 14 LTD Manhattan Avenue Amsterdam M2 M3 499 M10 LTD 5 Waterfront 6 M3 M10 Greenway 125 St M2 2160 St. Nicholas Avenue M2 1 99 Bx15 Avenue 7 M104 M101 Blvd Douglass Frederick 299 201 W 125 StreetBx15 LTD 401 399 363 357 349 301 Tiemann Place LTD Terrace Nicholas St. W 127 Street W 127 Street M11 M101 Bx15 M100 LTD 46 M104 64 Bx15 M101 439 202 548 LTD M11 501 M100 M101 M104 167 M104 166 327 332 2130 2358 2359 George Bruce 499 3170 William B. Library Washington Avenue 8 R 401 399 351 349 Garden Clayton Williams 299 201 i v Community e W 126 Street Garden W 126 Street r 04 1 s M i d Broadway General Grant Houses e Riverside Drive Riverside Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. D 1320 State Office Building r M60SBS i Avenue Claremont M60SBS v 145 Claremont St. Joseph of 321 2104 2338 2339 Playground e the Holy Family E Apollo Theater Church 125 St a Bx15 1 M1 s 109 01 299 Bx15 LTD 176 121 LT 399 351 301 M60 201 t D Av Morningside M100 M101 HenryHudson Parkway M100 SBS M101 LTD Riverside Drive West M60SBS LaSalle Street Avenue Amsterdam W 125 Street M100 W 125 Street M101 LTD M60SBS Bx15 124 M60 Bx15 174 Roosevelt LTD SBS M100 Triangle 39 M101 M101 LTD M4 General Grant Houses 284 1305 289 2319 2320 M104 M4 Hancock Place 2090 M104 Refuge Temple M4 M60 of the Church of SBS LTD M4 M60 351 349 301 299 201 Our Lord Jesus Christ LTD Morningside Gardens SBS M11 Playground One W 124 Street W 124 Street 3096 M11 Twenty Five CXXV M3 107 2071 2291 2070 Morningside Heights M3 2296 Playground Hancock One Two Three Douglass Boulevard Frederick Park General Grant 599 501 499 CXXIII 399 339 327 301 299 201 199 National Memorial W 123 Street W 123 Street St. Nicholas Avenue W 123 Street (Grant’s Tomb) Sakura Park 300 Claremont Avenue Claremont Manhattan School Jewish of Music Theological 247 Margaret Douglas 94 1268 541 530 2051 2271 2052 Seminary School, PS 36 2280 Our Little Green Joseph Daniel 8 Avenue 8 501 Acre Wilson Garden 165 399 331 329 303 299 201 199 W 122 Street W 122 Street Morn W 122 Street Harriet Tubman W 122 Street Boulevard Jr. Powell, Clayton Adam ing Statue si de Union Theological D r M2 Seminary i 114 v LTD M2 (Columbia University) e LTD 81 517 516 2266 1241 1252 3072 M2 M2 7 Avenue 7 Broadway 599 501 499 401 379 327 325 301 299 201 199 Union W 121 Street W 121 Street Manhattan Avenue W 121 Street Morningside Avenue Morningside Theological Avenue Amsterdam Seminary Five Star Gardens A. Philip Randolph Teachers College 100 206 M60SBS 61 493 498 School, PS 76 2011 2014 (Columbia University) 2229 Manhattan Waterfront 2230 PS 76 Riverside Church M60SBS Greenway M60 499 401 399 327 325 301 273 269 Garden 201 199 SBS 5 minutes W 120 Street W 120 Street W 120 Street W 120 Street M60SBS M60 M2 LTD SBS M2 LTD Hugo Newman M3 M10 185 182 M60SBS 90 1989 Interchurch School, PS 180 M3 M10 1980 Center 1212 499 401 399 351 349 301 Douglass Boulevard Frederick 299 269 267 201 199 2 W 119 Street W 119 Street W 119 Street St. Nicholas Avenue W 119 Street M 626 2 468 6 minutes Columbia Police Athletic League Harlem Center M Secondary School for Academics, Arts and Recreation 163 164 Community Garden Boulevard Jr. Powell, Clayton Adam 82 44 444 2187 1967 1966 M5 M60 2198 LTD M5 SBS M60 6 minutes LTD SBS 8 Avenue 8 Broadway M5 M4 499 401 399 351 349 301 299 251 249 201 199 M5 M104 M4 Barnard M104 Riverside Drive Riverside W 118 Street W 118 Street Drive Morningside W 118 Street College Morningside Avenue M4 LTD M4 LTD 35 147 150 417 400 1947 1954 Claremont Avenue Claremont Columbia University Carrie McCracken TRUCE St. Paul’s Avenue 7 Low Library Community Garden Amsterdam Avenue Amsterdam Harlem Chapel 499 351 349 301 299 211 203 199 Flight Sculpture Uptown 3 M W 117 Street Manhattan Avenue W 117 Street Tightrope Walker Three-Way Piece: A. Philip Sculpture Points Sculpture Randolph Square Alma Mater Statue Life Force Sculpture Bellerophon Taming Pegasus 121 Sculpture 25 390 395 2161 2160 1 Henry Hudson Parkway 116 St-Columbia 1 3 M University Miller M 438 653 Theatre 399 351 349 301 299 M102 201 199 Riverside Carl Schurz M116 Hudson M5 LTD Memorial 0 W 116 Street W 116 Street W 116 Street 1 W 116 Street M Park 5 M Sundial River M5 LTD M60SBS M102 0 1 116 St M116 Garden M of Love M11 M60SBS 16 54 110 434 M11 371 372 2131 1902 2136 Columbia University 115 Street Samuel Marx Morningside Triangle 699 499 401 399 351 349 301 299 Library 201 199 5 M St. Nicholas Av W 115 Street W 115 Street Morningside Drive Park W 115 Street W 115 Street Morningside Avenue 352 Mount Sinai M3 1 St. Luke’s Hospital 1 6 M7 M3 89 M 344 2117 345 M116 1880 M7 2120 1885 2929 425 M116 Broadway Church of Notre Dame Riverside Drive Riverside Presbyterian Church 699 349 301 299 201 Mount Neboh D Baptist T L Manhattan Avenue Manhattan Amsterdam Avenue Amsterdam W 114 Street 4 W 114 Street W 114 Street Church M Lafayette Square Mount Sinai Boulevard Douglass Frederick 414 St. Luke’s Hospital 312 1867 2103 1864 1090 2092 2900 2905 Morningside Heights 699 601 Library 319 301 299 201 199 W 113 Street W 113 Street W 113 Street Louis Kossuth M4 LTD Monument M60 SBS M60 113th Street SBS Play Garden 1079 M2 LTD M2 400 M4 M10 M104 M4 Boulevard Jr. Powell, Clayton Adam LTD 298 1064 M10 2890 2895 M104 M2 M4 2 M2 LTD Broadway M4 Tot Lot 112 4 LTD 501 329 301 299 201 199 M Cathedral Church of W 112 Street Morningside Drive W 112 Street Riverside Drive St. John the Divine R i v e Bank Street 1 r s i College of d e 390 Education D 280 1046 2871 1829 r 1842 2868 2055 2050 i v e 7 Avenue 7 West 111 Street Avenue 8 699 601 599 People’s Garden 399 301 299 201 199 4 Manhattan M Manhattan Avenue Manhattan Waterfront W 111 Street Avenue Amsterdam Children’s Sculpture W 111 Street Greenway C Garden a t h e d r a l 382 1810 1809 1020 P 2850 2853 a Cathedral Pkwy (110 St) r Tot Lot 110 k w Cathedral Pkwy (110 St) 299 M3 201 199 a M4 699 601 599 501 1021 325 301 M4 y M4 Frederick LTD M4 LTD Douglass Statue Central Park North W 110 Street Cathedral Parkway W 110 Street Frederick Douglass M3 M4 M4 LTD M4 M4 Circle Minerva Bernadino M11 LTD Greenstreet Eas t Drive 371 998 998 2833 2828 219 220 1003 110th Street West 110th Street Bridge Playground rive st D 399 301 299 201 199 101 99 27 25 1 We W 109 Street W 109 Street W 109 Street Riverside Drive Riverside Anibal Aviles M11 Blockhouse 481 193 200 987 988 2821 2814 M11 362 Playground Broadway Riverside Drive Riverside 399 301 299 201 199 101 99 37 35 1 Columbus Avenue Columbus Amsterdam Avenue Amsterdam W 108 Street W 108 Street Avenue Manhattan W 108 Street North 7 Central Park West Park Central Woods M5 2788 Booker T. Washington Booker T. Washington M7 LTD M5 M116 M7 M10 Central Park School, JHS 54 161 LTD Playground 160 964 969 969 353 M10 2787 M116 Loop M5 1 M5 M 6 399 301 0 299 201 199 37 35 1 S B S y a W 107 Street W 107 Street W 107 Street w k Mobilization r Peter Jay Sharp Broadway for Change Garden a Volunteer House P 6 M60SBS 2768 n 949 147 150 949 946 o 343 s Upper West Side Central d Straus u Park H 269 201 199 101 99 39 37 399 301 y M116 r n Park 7 e W 106 Street W 106 Street M W 106 Street M116 M7 H M116 M60 M7 SBS M116 936 2750 929 131 132 334 929 928 926 929 Great Hill 399 297 920 255 247 201 199 101 99 49 47 1 Tot Lot 105 e v i r W 105 Street W 105 Street W 105 Street West Park Central D Columbus Avenue Columbus Manhattan Avenue Manhattan t s Amsterdam Avenue Amsterdam Grosvenor e W Broadway Neighborhood House La Perla YMCA Garden M7 M11 113 104 910 910 915 446 907 323 M104 M104 908 Bloomingdale Playground Riverside Drive Riverside Children’s Riverside Drive Riverside 5 399 301 299 237 235 201 135 101 99 43 41 1 Glade W 104 Street Avenue End West W 104 Street W 104 Street 103 St Garden One Hundred Four Central Park 2709 2708 CIV M7 77 Loop 78 314 891 435 898 895 890 M11 Manhattan Valley 103 St Post: 116 St-Columbia University 2 Map © City of New York.
Recommended publications
  • Gang Takedowns in the De Blasio Era
    GANG TAKEDOWNS IN The Dangers of THE DE BLASIO ERA: ‘Precision Policing’ By JOSMAR TRUJILLO and ALEX S. VITALE TABLE OF CONTENTS 1. About & Acknowledgement . 1 2. Introduction . 2. 3. Gang Raids . .4 4. Database . 6 5. SIDEBAR: Inventing gangs . .11 6. Consequences of Gang Labeling . 13 i. Harassment, Hyper-Policing ii. Enhanced Bail iii. Indictments, Trials & Plea Deals iii. Employment Issues iv. Housing v. Deportation Risks 7. SIDEBAR: School Policing . 21 8. Focused Deterrence . 22 9. Prosecutor profile: Cyrus Vance Jr. 24 10. Action spotlight: Legal Aid’s FOIL Campaign . 28 11. Conclusion/Recommendations. 29 2019 New York City Gang Policing Report | 3 ABOUT THE POLICING AND ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS SOCIAL JUSTICE PROJECT This report was compiled and edited by Josmar Trujillo AT BROOKLYN COLLEGE and Professor Alex Vitale from The Policing and Social Justice Project at Brooklyn College. Additional research The Policing and Social Justice Project at Brooklyn support was provided by Amy Martinez. College is an effort of faculty, students and community researchers that offers support in dismantling harmful Insights from interviews of people directly impacted policing practices. Over the past three years, the by gang policing, including public housing residents, Project has helped to support actions, convenings, inspired and spearheaded this report. In many and community events to drive public education ways, this report is a reflection of the brave voices of and advocacy against the New York City Police community members and family members including Department’s gang policing tactics, including its so- Taylonn Murphy Sr., Darlene Murray, Diane Pippen, called gang database. Shaniqua Williams, Afrika Owes, Kraig Lewis, mothers from the Bronx120 case, and many more.
    [Show full text]
  • Discord Among Parents in Wake of Harlem Raid | Juvenile Justice Information Exchange
    A Support Search GO P Categories More Largo Project from the Investigative News Network > Juvenile Justice Information Exchange > News > Discord Among Parents in Wake of Harlem Raid Discord Among Parents in Wake of Harlem Raid By: DARYL KHAN | July 3, 2014 Tweet Like 35 Share Email NEW YORK — The residents of the Robert Stolarik / JJIE The killing of Tayshana Murphy on September 11, 2011 sparked a feud between The Manhattanville Houses and the Grant Houses in West Harlem leaving stretch of a street along Old Broadway a virtual war zone. Manhattanville and Grant Houses in West Harlem have a new touchstone, a specific moment to organize their collective memory, a way to divide their lives. Just a month after the New York Police Department conducted the largest raid in the city’s history, the residents who experienced it have a way to refer to their lives in clear “before and after” terms, like old historical abbreviations B.C. and A.D. converted by Web2PDFConvert.com In the Manhattanville and Grant Houses there was life before The Raid and life after The Raid. Life has gone on, but it has changed, residents and activists say. To them, life after The Raid has borne witness to undeniable changes. Crime is down, the streets are calmer, the sound of gunshots have, for now, been quieted. “Residents feel better about where they live now, about their homes,” said Sarah Martin, 77, who until she resigned on June 16 was for 25 years the General Grant Houses Resident Association president. “They feel like they were expecting a long, hot summer and now they feel it will be problem-free, at least for awhile.” But for many residents of the two public housing projects, especially families of the arrestees, it has been a disorienting period.
    [Show full text]
  • August 9, 2021 RELIEF RESOURCES and SUPPORTIVE
    September 24, 2021 RELIEF RESOURCES AND SUPPORTIVE INFORMATION1 • Health & Wellness • Housing • Workplace Support • Human Rights • Education • Bilingual and Culturally Competent Material • Beware of Scams • Volunteering • Utilities • Legal Assistance • City and State Services • Burial • Transportation • New York Forward/Reopening Guidance • Events HEALTH & WELLNESS • Financial Assistance and Coaching o COVID-19 Recovery Center : The City Comptroller has launched an online, multilingual, comprehensive guide to help New Yorkers navigate the many federal, state and city relief programs that you may qualify for. Whether you’re a tenant, homeowner, parent, small business owner, or excluded worker, this online guide offers information about a range of services and financial support. o New York City will be extending free tax assistance to help families claim their new federal child tax credit. As an investment in the long-term recovery from the pandemic, the federal American Rescue Plan made changes to the Child Tax Credit so families get half of the fully refundable credit—worth up to $3,600 per child—as monthly payments in 2021 and the other half as a part of their refund in 1 Compiled from multiple public sources 2022. Most families will automatically receive the advance payments, but 250,000+ New York City families with more than 400,000 children need to sign up with the IRS to receive the Credit. The Advance Child Tax Credits payments began on July 15, 2021 and most New Yorkers will receive their payments automatically. However, New Yorkers who have not submitted information to the IRS need to either file their taxes or enter their information with the IRS’ Child Tax Credit Non-Filer Sign-Up Tool For more information about the Advance Child Tax Credit including access to Multilingual flyer and poster—and NYC Free Tax Prep, visit nyc.gov/TaxPrep or call 311.
    [Show full text]
  • Social Services Resource Guide
    Bank Street College of Education ∙​ ​Barnard College Cathedral of St. John the Divine ∙​ ​Columbia University Corpus Christi ∙​ ​Interchurch Center ∙​ ​International House Jewish Theological Seminary ∙​ ​Manhattan School of Music Riverside Church ∙​ ​St. Hilda’s & St. Hugh’s ∙​ ​Mt. Sinai St. Luke’s Hospital Teachers College ∙​ ​Ulysses S. Grant Houses ∙​ ​Union Theological Seminary Social Services Meals Program - Lunch Meals Program - Lunch Resource Guide Broadway Community Inc. Momentum Project- St. Meals Programs 601 W. 114th St. New York, NY Joseph of the Holy Family 212-864-6100 EXT 120 405 W. 125th St, New York, NY Food Pantries Mondays, Wednesdays 718-295-5605 12:30 - 2:30 P.M. Fridays 3:00 - 5:30 P.M. Meals Program - Breakfast Broadway United Church of Christ Relief Bus Mobile Resource Center 2504 Broadway W. 145th Cathedral Community Cares New York, NY 10025 (between Broadway & Amsterdam Ave) 1047 Amsterdam Avenue New York, NY 10025 212-316-5700 New York, NY 10031 212-316-7581 Tuesdays, Thursdays 3:30 P.M. Wednesdays 10:00 A.M.- 2:00 P.M. Sundays 10 A.M. Central Harlem Alcohol Crisis Center Cathedral Community Cares Saint Mary’s Episcopal Church 419 W. 126th St New York, NY 10027 1047 Amsterdam Ave. New York, NY 10025 521 W. 126th St. New York, NY 10027 212-865-6133 212-316-7581 212-864-4013 Mondays - Fridays 8:00 - 8:45 A.M. Sundays 12:30 + Take-away bagged meal Saturdays 12:00 P.M. - 4:00 P.M. Mother’s Kitchen at Ascension Church Central Harlem Alcohol Crisis Center Saint Michaels Church 221 W.
    [Show full text]
  • 125 St M3 2375 2160 1 99 Bx15 M104 M101 299 201 0
    Neighborhood Map ¯ Alexander Hamilton City College Hamilton Grange 612 Mahalia Jackson Playground of New York 121 National Memorial 120 83 260 1631 630 1626 2407 2630 2400 3448 3449 School, PS 123 8 Avenue 8 7 Avenue 7 601 Broadway 599 539 501 499 447 341 335 299 201 199 699 Av Convent Riverside Drive Riverside St. Nicholas Avenue W 140 Street Av Amsterdam W 140 Street W 140 Street Arlington Edinboro Av Edgecombe Playground Swimming M4 340 Mount Calvary Hall LTD M4 M101 High School for United Methodist Church M5 LTD LTD M101 Manhattan LTD M5 Mathematics, Science LTD M3 LTD and Engineering M3 Waterfront 51 48 2388 626 2377 105 M100 2618 at City College 2617 Greenway M4 M101 108 M5 M100 M11 M4 M101 M11 M5 Hamilton Place 699 545 543 501 337 335 301 299 201 199 W 139 Street W 139 Street Riverbank 568 Shepard Hall 336 M2 LTD M2 574 State Park Riverside Valley 610 M10 LTD 91 Community 88 1586 M10 Garden M2 Hamilton Heights M2 699 601 543 539 501 337 329 301 299 201 199 W 138 Street W 138 Street Henry Hudson Parkway Hudson Henry e u n St. Mark’s 600 Montefiore e Methodist Church 58 v Park 2341 2574 2575 2348 A 137 St City College t n e Broadway e 699 c 329 301 299 201 199 v a Edgecombe Avenue Edgecombe r n r Downtown only e o City College W 137 Street 17 W 137 Street T Jacob H. Schiff C of New York s a School, Avenue Amsterdam l Jacob H.
    [Show full text]
  • Columbia University Manhattanville Scholarships for Lifelong Learners
    Columbia University Manhattanville Scholarships for Lifelong Learners Columbia University is proud to announce its Manhattanville Scholarship Program for Lifelong Learners. The Lifelong Learners Program is designed for individuals over 65 years of age committed to the principles of lifelong education. The Lifelong Learners Scholarships allow seniors not currently enrolled in college the opportunity to attend select lectures and courses drawn from the University's offerings in the Arts and Sciences during the academic year at no charge. First launched in 1986 in partnership with the Brookdale Institute on Aging and Human Development, the Lifelong Learner’s Program is run by Columbia’s School for Continuing Education and has grown to 200 participants. Manhattanville Scholarships for Lifelong Learners are available to residents of the Manhattanville Houses and Grant Houses and the local community who are 65 and older. Beginning in September 2013, scholarship recipients may attend Columbia Arts and Sciences courses free of charge. Scholarship recipients are encouraged to attend class and to keep up with the reading. No examinations or papers are required and no grade is assigned. Scholarship recipients will also have access to Columbia libraries, services at campus cafes and the University bookstore, and can take advantage of cultural discount programs in New York City offered to other Columbia students. For an application and additional information, please contact the School of Continuing Education at: Email: [email protected] Phone: 212-854-9666 The Manhattanville Lifelong Learner Scholarship Program is supported by the School of Continuing Education’s Office of Student Life, a team of student services professionals committed to providing information about Columbia’s academic resources.
    [Show full text]
  • Chapter VIII
    VIII 125th Street Generic: Harlem “[t]he City… a universe of rented spaces haunted by a nowhere or by dreamed-of places.” Michel de Certeau, The Practice of Everyday Life. “It’s such a Bore Being always Poor.” Langston Hughes, Ennui Ting 1 Harlem. The name itself is laden with so much meaning, and so much history… the Harlem Renaissance… W. E. B. DuBois… Langston Hughes… Malcolm X… Marcus Garvey… Duke Ellington… The Cotton Club… The Apollo Theater. Club and Theater are still here. And Harlem is still predominantly African- American. But AMERICA is slowly encroaching: materialistic, middle-classed, race- neutral AMERICA. In bits of Harlem there are as many white faces as there are black. Today’s main street Harlem – 125th Street, also known as Martin Luther King Jr Boulevard – plays host to a new slate of names… Starbucks… The Body Shop… Samsung… Dunkin Donuts… Marshalls… H & M… Yes, even H & M, that bastion of white Northern European middle-classedness. Everyday life here is becoming like everyday life elsewhere in Manhattan, and elsewhere in the United States. In parts of Harlem, one may be forgiven for thinking oneself lost in a middle America suburb. Harlem isn’t gentrifying, as much as genericising – becoming generic, ordinary, banal. It’s losing its edge and character. Ting 2 The Tale of 125th Street begins to the west of the island, where the street is the boundary between the relatively wealthy and white Morningside Heights, now considered part of the Upper West Side, and Manhattanville, which is slightly more of the same, except there a few blocks of public housing here.
    [Show full text]
  • Public Housing Testimony
    Testimony of: Michael Hendrix Director of State and Local Policy, Manhattan Institute Hearing on: Preserving a Lifeline: Examining Public Housing in a Pandemic Subcommittee on Housing, Community Development and Insurance U.S. House Committee on Financial Services March 24, 2021 Chairman Cleaver, Ranking Member Stivers, and Members of the Subcommittee, thank you for inviting me to participate in today’s hearing. My name is Michael Hendrix, and I serve as the director of state and local policy at the Manhattan Institute. Along with my colleagues, we seek to advance freedom and opportunity across America’s communities. The pandemic showed us the failed reality of public housing in America—and the need for a better deal for Americans in need of a safe place to call home. Nowhere is this clearer than with the New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA), the nation’s oldest and largest public housing system, and long held as the greatest example of what government-led housing can achieve. “A new day is dawning, a new life, a new America,” declared then-New York Mayor Fiorello La Guardia at the 1936 launch of a campaign of development and slum clearance that would set the tone for public housing across this country.1 That “new dawn” is now long past. The “new life” turned into a dead end for millions of Americans. Through the example of NYCHA, we must see how poorly run local housing authorities are (1) failing to care for the well-being of their tenants, (2) actively harming the health and safety of those under their roof, (3) and doing little to integrate residents into the broader economy or community.
    [Show full text]
  • Columbia University Visitors Center
    COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY IN THE CITY OF NEW YORK Morningside Heights Self-Guided Walking Tour Welcome to Columbia University. Maps and other materials for self-guided tours are available in the Visitors Center, located in room 213 of Low Memorial Library. The Visitors Center is open 01 Monday through Friday from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. A current Columbia I.D. is required to enter all buildings except Low Library and St. Paul’s Chapel unless accompanied by a University tour guide. A virtual tour and podcast are also available online. Columbia University was founded in 1754 as King's College by royal charter of King George II of England. It is the oldest institution of higher learning in the state of New York and the fifth oldest in the United States. Founded in 1754 as King's College, Columbia University is today an international center of scholarship, with a pioneering undergraduate curriculum and renowned graduate and professional programs. Among the earliest students and trustees of King's College were John Jay, the first chief justice of the United States; Alexander Hamilton, the first secretary of the treasury; Gouverneur Morris, the author of the final draft of the U.S. Constitution; and Robert R. Livingston, a member of the five-man committee that drafted the Declaration of Independence. After the American Revolution, the University reopened in 1784 with a new name—Columbia—that embodied the patriotic fervor that had inspired the nation's quest for independence. In 1897, the university moved from Forty-ninth Street and Madison Avenue, where it had stood for fifty years, to its present location on Morningside Heights at 116th Street and Broadway.
    [Show full text]
  • Columbia Community Newsletter Fall 2016.Pdf
    THECOLUMBIANEWSLETTER news for our neighbors FALL 2016 MANHATTANVILLE By GCA Staff tk continued on page 4 Top row: Eric Kandel is codirector of the Mortimer B. Zuckerman Mind Brain Behavior Institute, which will be housed on the new Manhattanville campus; the Jerome L. Greene Science Center and the Lenfest Center for the Arts will open in Fall 2016; at the Zuckerman Institute, public school children learn about the human brain. Middle row: Workers hoist the final beam atop the Greene Science Center; Sheila Anderson, Eric K. Washington, and Martha Diaz are participants in the Columbia Community Scholars Program, one of many community benefits associated with the new campus; Carol Becker, dean of the Columbia School of the Arts.Bottom row: Deborah Cullen is director and chief curator of the Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Art Gallery; students from the School of the Arts participate in a public exhibition of their thesis projects (photo by Joel Jares); the Manhattanville campus from the 125th Street subway platform. he first two buildings of Columbia University’s new Manhattanville campus the Columbia University Medical Center to the Greene Science Center. Each summer, the have risen from the ground. The Jerome L. Greene Science Center and the Zuckerman Institute hosts the Brain Research Apprenticeships in New York at Columbia Lenfest Center for the Arts will not only provide new space for teaching and (BRAINYAC), a program that helps New York City high school students broaden their research; they will also create new opportunities for the University to expand scientific knowledge, hone research skills, and learn about possible biomedical careers see( Tthe scope of its partnerships in the surrounding community.
    [Show full text]
  • Columbia NC Study.Indd
    Manhattanville Neighborhood Conditions Study B. HISTORIC CONTEXT Following several decades as a commercial waterfront village consisting of stables, warehouses, ice- houses, and factories, Manhattanville developed into a thriving industrial district in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Spurred by transportation improvements in the mid-1800s, including a rail station and ferry terminal at 130th Street, the area was ideally located for quick shipment of goods to New Jersey and points north. Initially, the neighborhood attracted the dairy and meatpacking industries, which required expedient shipment for perishable goods. In the early 20th century, construction of the IRT subway system, including the Manhattan Valley IRT viaduct, created a housing boom in the Manhattanville area and a commercial corridor formed along Broadway—effectively transforming the village into the urban area it is today. While housing was developed throughout Manhattanville, the study area itself remained a manufacturing and trade-related hub in large part due to the 1916 zoning resolution that deemed the study area as “unrestricted,” thereby allowing for industrial use. When demand for automobiles increased after World War I, ample space, unrestricted zoning, and visibility from the elevated IRT subway line made Manhattanville an excellent choice for automobile service facilities. Manhattanville’s ferry and rail access was of particular importance, as cars were manufactured in the Midwest and delivered by sea and rail freight to the study area. Automobile show-
    [Show full text]
  • EVET CEDREZ, Who Has Been a Resident at NYCHA's Grant Houses
    The City of New York Department of Investigation ROSE GILL HEARN COMMISSIONER 80 MAIDEN LANE Release #034-2003 NEW YORK, NY 10038 nyc.gov/html/doi 212-825-5900 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: EMILY GEST FRIDAY, JUNE 27, 2003 (212) 825-5931 FOUR INDIVIDUALS CHARGED IN $79,000 HOUSING FRAUD ROSE GILL HEARN, Commissioner of the Department of Investigation (DOI), announced today the arrest of four current and former residents in the New York City Housing Authority for fraudulently receiving more than $79,000 in government rent subsidies for apartments in Washington Heights and Harlem. Three Defendants -- ICELEAN LOCKWOOD, SHARON BARNES and EVET CEDREZ -- have been charged with filing false documents on which they allegedly concealed their income so that they could receive rent subsidies ranging from $8,000 to $12,000. If convicted, they each face up to five years in jail. The fourth defendant, EVITA DAWSON, who allegedly failed to inform NYCHA that she had moved from her Section 8 apartment so she could continue to collect a subsidy, has been charged with stealing $46,000. If convicted, she faces up to ten years in jail. These arrests are part of an ongoing Citywide crackdown by DOI and the local United States Attorneys and District Attorneys, that has, since 1995, resulted in the arrest of 284 residents--including 93 City, State and Federal employees--charged with stealing more that $5.6 million in rent and welfare subsidies by hiding their income and assets from the City. Since January 2003 alone, 26 individuals have been arrested for illegally receiving more than $366,000 in government housing benefits by concealing their employment or household income from NYCHA.
    [Show full text]