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Construction on 1 Pace Plaza started in December 1966 [2] [3] and was completed in 1970 [4] on the site of the former New York Tribune Building. [5] It was part of the 1960s Brooklyn Bridge Title I Project, which included the Southbridge Towers, the Beekman Hospital (now New York Downtown Hospital) and the World Trade Center.
Pace University is a private university with campuses in New York City and Westchester County, New York, United States.It was established in 1906 as a business school by the brothers Homer St. Clair Pace and Charles A. Pace. [5] Pace enrolls about 13,000 students as of fall 2021 in bachelor's, master's and doctoral programs.
The building is just east of City Hall Park and south of Pace University and the Brooklyn Bridge. Immediately to the west are 150 Nassau Street and the Morse Building (140 Nassau Street). [5] There are public plazas on both the east and west sides of the building, one 11,000 square feet (1,000 m 2) and the other smaller.
The Potter Building is on the same block as 41 Park Row and Pace University's One Pace Plaza is across Spruce Street. [3] The structure sits on a trapezoidal lot with a frontage of 60 feet (18 m) on Spruce Street, 96 feet (29 m) on Nassau Street, and 102 feet (31 m) on Park Row, with a 104-foot-long (32 m) party wall adjoining the Potter Building.
The school was established in 1906, as the 'Pace School of Accountancy,' to prepare men and women for the CPA exam, [4] and was named after Joseph I. Lubin, an alumnus and benefactor of the school, in 1981. [4] The school is located at Pace University's campuses in New York City and Westchester County, New York.
The plaza had been named in 1989 in honor of John Christopher Drumgoole (1816–1888), a priest who helped thousands of homeless newsboys [1] who thronged the area when Park Row was the headquarters of New York City's major newspapers, including The New York Times in the building Pace now occupies at 41 Park Row.
White Plains station is a commuter rail stop on the Metro-North Railroad's Harlem Line, located in White Plains, New York.With 9,166 daily commuters as of 2006, [5] White Plains is the busiest Metro-North station in Westchester County, the busiest non-terminal or transfer station on the Metro-North system, and the first/last stop outside New York City on most upper Harlem Line express trains.
Pace University School of Law; Homer Pace; W. Willem C. Vis Moot This page was last edited on 22 November 2024, at 04:17 (UTC). Text is available under the ...