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Notable residents include Genovese crime family boss Vincent Gigante; artist and satirist Joey Skaggs at 135 Sullivan Street, [3] politician Fiorello La Guardia, three-term Mayor of New York City, who was born at 177 Sullivan Street; [4] Vogue editrix Anna Wintour lived at 154 Sullivan; [5] composer Edgard Varèse and his wife Louise lived at ...
10 Sullivan is a triangular sixteen-story residential building in the SoHo neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City. The building occupies a site between Sixth Avenue and Sullivan Street adjacent to the Holland Tunnel entrance. It was developed between 2014 and 2016 by Property Market Group and Madison Equities, and was designed by Tamarkin Co.
New York City: Manhattan only; overlays with 212, 332, and 917 680: 2017: Syracuse, Utica, Watertown, and north central New York; overlay of 315 716: 1947 Buffalo, Dunkirk-Fredonia, Olean, Jamestown, Niagara Falls, Tonawanda and western New York; will be overlaid by 624 in 2024 718: 1984 New York City: all except Manhattan; overlays with 347 ...
83 and 85 Sullivan Street are on Sullivan Street between Broome Street and Spring Street in Manhattan, New York. They are the two surviving Federal style rowhouses on this location, which was at one point part of the Bayard farm.
The MacDougal–Sullivan Gardens Historic District is a small historic district consisting of 22 houses located at 74–96 MacDougal Street and 170–188 Sullivan Street between Houston and Bleecker Streets in the South Village area of the Greenwich Village neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City.
Lion's Den was a music club located at 214 Sullivan Street, between Bleecker Street and West 3rd Street, in the Greenwich Village section of Manhattan in New York City.It opened in 1990 and closed in December 2007.
The Ed Sullivan Theater is at 1697 Broadway, in the Theater District of Midtown Manhattan in New York City, on the west side of the street between 53rd and 54th streets. [3] [4] The theater building's site is approximately L-shaped [4] [5] and covers 17,527 square feet (1,628.3 m 2). [5]
[3] [4] The church was solemnly dedicated on April 10, 1866, by McCloskey, by then the first cardinal of New York. A view of the facade of the church. Between 1886 and 1888, the parish funded the building of a new church on Sullivan Street, designed by Arthur Crooks in the Romanesque Revival style. The friars had originally taken up residence ...