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Polymath Park is near Wright's Fallingwater (23 miles) and Kentuck Knob (29 miles). All four houses are open to guided tours and overnight guests. Duncan House and Lindholm House are the only Wright houses in the area that offer overnight stays. [1] [2] Polymath Park is run by the nonprofit Usonian Preservation Corporation. [3]
A passageway to the 42nd Street–Bryant Park station opened on September 7, 2021, along with a new platform at the shuttle station. [12] The new passageway is closed during late nights, when the shuttle doesn't operate. Times Square–42nd Street: BMT Broadway Line N Q R W Times Square–42nd Street
Berndtson's best known work is Polymath Park, which is located sixty miles southwest of Pittsburgh in the Laurel Highlands and sited near Wright's Fallingwater and Kentuck Knob. The park features two Berndtson houses as well as Wright's Duncan House. [2]
Virtual tours of Fallingwater have been created as well. [324] One such tour was released in CD format in 1997, [437] and Love created a 3-D virtual tour of the house in the mid-2010s. [324] [438] The house has been commemorated in other media, such as a postage-stamp issue from 1982. [439] Fallingwater has been depicted in several creative works.
The 42nd Street section of the line connected Broadway at Times Square, on the west, to Park Avenue at Grand Central Terminal, on the east. [8]: 243–244 At the Times Square end of this segment, the line curved sharply to the north under One Times Square, swinging northeast under Seventh Avenue before shifting under Broadway. [9]
The present shuttle station at Times Square–42nd Street was constructed as part of the route segment underneath 42nd Street and Times Square, which extended from Park Avenue and 41st Street to Broadway and 47th Street. Construction on this section of the line began on February 25, 1901. Work for that section had been awarded to Degnon-McLean ...
The promotional CD contained a photo gallery of Times Square's history, details of 4 Times Square's green-building features, and a map of planned hotels and stores nearby. [137] The Durst Organization received a $340 million construction loan in mid-1997. [138] [139] The loan was issued by a syndicate of banks led by the Bank of New York. [138]
The local tracks are used by the 1 at all times [73] and by the 2 during late nights; [74] the express tracks are used by the 2 train during daytime hours [74] and the 3 train at all times. [75] The next stop to the north is 79th Street for local trains and 96th Street for express trains.