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The Equitable Life Assurance Building, also known as the Equitable Life Building, was the headquarters of the Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States, at 120 Broadway in Manhattan, New York. Arthur Gilman and Edward H. Kendall designed the building, with George B. Post as a consulting engineer.
Harlem Grown P.S. 125 Community Garden 425 West 123rd Street Harlem Roots Community Garden 203 W. 120th Street Harlem Rose Garden 8 East 129th Street Harlem Valley Garden 197 West 134th Street Harlem Village Green 54 W 129th Street Herb Garden (formerly 111th St. Betterment Assoc.) 176 E 111th Street Home Depot Children's Garden
The Equitable Building is an office skyscraper located at 120 Broadway between Pine and Cedar streets in the Financial District of Lower Manhattan in New York City.The skyscraper was designed by Ernest R. Graham in the neoclassical style, with Peirce Anderson as the architect-in-charge.
Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Sculpture Garden. The Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Sculpture Garden is an outdoor courtyard at the Museum of Modern Art in Manhattan, New York City. Designed by notable architect Philip Johnson, the courtyard was conceived at the same time as Johnson's West Wing annex for the museum. Construction began in the spring on 1952 ...
West Broadway is a north-south street in the New York City borough of Manhattan, separated into two parts by Tribeca Park. The northern part begins at Tribeca Park, near the intersection of Avenue of the Americas (Sixth Avenue), Walker Street and Beach Street in Tribeca .
The street was formally laid out in 1696, the first street north of still-palisaded Wall Street. [6]By 1728, a market was held at the foot of Maiden Lane, where it ended at Front Street facing the East River; by 1823, when it was demolished and disbanded, [7] the Fly Market, [a] selling meat, country produce and fish under its covered roofs, was New York's oldest. [8]
Straus Park is a small landscaped park on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, at the intersection of Broadway, West End Avenue, and 106th Street. The most notable feature is a bronze 1913 statue by American artist Augustus Lukeman of a nymph gazing over a calm expanse of water in memory of Ida and Isidor Straus , husband and wife, he a United ...
The exterior of Niblo's Garden c. 1887 View from the stage, 1853. Niblo's Garden was a theater on Broadway and Crosby Street, near Prince Street, in SoHo, Manhattan, New York City. [1] It was established in 1823 as "Columbia Garden" [2] which in 1828 gained the name of the Sans Souci and was later the property of the coffeehouse proprietor and ...