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Michael Winn was part of a core group of Western esoteric students taught by Mantak Chia. [1] Winn is the most notable of these students, going on to found the Healing Tao University in upstate New York and providing support for local centers in metropolitan areas throughout North America.
Mantak Chia is the creator of the Healing Tao, Tao Yoga, Universal Healing Tao System, and Tao Garden Health Spa & Resort, located in the northern countryside of Chiang Mai, Thailand. He wrote more than 60 books on Taoist practices and taught the principles of Taoist internal arts. His books have been translated into more than 40 languages.
The Center for Architecture is located in the neighborhood of Greenwich Village at 536 LaGuardia Place, between West 3rd Street and Bleecker Street in Manhattan, New York City. [1] The center was designed by architect Andrew Berman and completed in 2003. [2] Since its inception, the center, operated by the New York Chapter of the American ...
New York City Center, originally the Mecca Temple, is at 131 West 55th Street, between Sixth Avenue and Seventh Avenue, in the Midtown Manhattan neighborhood of New York City. [4] The building's L-shaped land lot covers 25,153 square feet (2,336.8 m 2 ), extending 200 feet (61 m) northward to 56th Street, [ 5 ] with frontage of 150 feet (46 m ...
Anagram Columbus Circle, New York NY [5] The Treadwell, New York NY [6] The Line Hotel DC, Washington DC [7] The Morrow, Washington DC [8] Saint Marks Place, New York NY [9] Momofuku Noodle Bar (at the Time Warner Center), New York NY [10] 121 East 22nd Street, New York NY [11] Equinox DUMBO, Brooklyn NY [12] Equinox Williamsburg, Brooklyn NY ...
The Trinity Building, designed by Francis H. Kimball and built in 1905, with an addition of 1907, [1]: 1 and Kimball's United States Realty Building of 1907, [2]: 1 located respectively at 111 and 115 Broadway in Manhattan's Financial District, are among the first Gothic-inspired skyscrapers in New York, and both are New York City designated landmarks.
Founded in 1980 in Manhattan's Chinatown, the museum began as the New York Chinatown History Project by historian John Kuo Wei Tchen and community resident and activist Charles Lai to promote understanding of the Chinese American experience and to address the concern that "the memories and experiences of aging older generations would perish without oral history, photo documentation, research ...
City of New York; New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 7, 2017; Balfour, Alan (1978). Rockefeller Center: Architecture as Theater. McGraw-Hill, Inc. ISBN 978-0070034808. Federal Writers' Project (1939). New York City Guide. New York: Random House. ISBN 978-1-60354-055-1.