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48 Hudson Avenue (also known as the Van Ostrande–Radliff House) is the oldest building in the city of Albany, New York. [2] It was believed by Paul Huey, in the Albany architectural guide of 1993, to have been built in 1759 by Johannes Radliff when he married Elizabeth Singleton because he believed it was built after the stockade was moved south by one block.
The Water Club was a restaurant and event venue on two barges moored on the East River at East 30th Street in Kips Bay, in Manhattan, New York City.Located on the stretch of waterfront between the East 34th Street Heliport and Waterside Plaza, the venue served classic American cuisine and seafood; it overlooked Long Island City, Queens and Greenpoint, Brooklyn across the river.
Evans opened a brewpub and restaurant at the station in 1999, naming it the Albany Pump Station. [ 5 ] [ 6 ] The establishment became a popular spot due to its location just northeast of downtown . The following year, the Preservation League of New York recognized the building with an award for Project Excellence. [ 2 ]
The restaurant buys $100,000 in beer alone every summer. They can do $11,000 in food purchases on a normal day. Address: 566 River St. in Charlotte along the Genesee River.
Miss Albany Diner in April 2010. In 1988, after the filming of Ironweed ended, the diner was bought by Cliff Brown and his wife Jane. Cliff Brown, a former Albany resident and retired insurance salesman for New York Life, gave it the name used in the film, which it has retained to the present day. [4]
Washington Avenue begins at Eagle Street, opposite the Albany City Hall, in Downtown Albany. Heading northwest, as a four-lane road, Washington Avenue moves past the northern side of the New York State Capitol as it climbs in elevation away from the Hudson River. From its beginnings at Eagle Street, Washington Avenue carries New York State Route 5.
Kenwood was a hamlet in the Town of Bethlehem, New York. The hamlet spanned both sides of the Normans Kill near the area where the Normans Kill flows into the Hudson River. [1] In 1870, and again in 1910, northern portions of Kenwood were annexed by the City of Albany, New York.