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The Trinity Building, designed by Francis H. Kimball and built in 1905, with an addition of 1907, [1]: 1 and Kimball's United States Realty Building of 1907, [2]: 1 located respectively at 111 and 115 Broadway in Manhattan's Financial District, are among the first Gothic-inspired skyscrapers in New York, and both are New York City designated landmarks.
388 Greenwich Street, originally called the Shearson Lehman Plaza and more recently the Travelers Building, is an office skyscraper in the Tribeca neighborhood of Lower Manhattan in New York City. The building is located at Greenwich Street , with frontages on North Moore and West Streets. 388 Greenwich Street forms a complex with the ...
Fisher Brothers is a real estate firm in New York City. It was formed by Martin Fisher in 1915, and later joined by his brothers Larry (born 1907) and Zachary (born 1910). [ 1 ] The Fisher family has substantial real estate holdings in New York City and elsewhere and are considered one of the "royal families" of New York real estate, alongside ...
111 Murray Street (formerly known as 101 Murray Street or 101 Tribeca) is a residential skyscraper completed in 2018 in Manhattan, New York City. Developed by Witkoff Group and Fisher Brothers , the building is located at the intersection of Murray and West Streets , in the Financial District and Tribeca neighborhoods and close to Battery Park ...
388 Bridge Street is a 590-foot residential high-rise skyscraper in Downtown Brooklyn, within New York City. [2] It contains 378 market rate units, [3] mixed between 234 rentals and 144 condominiums. [4] The building was originally under construction as an all condominium tower before the 2000s real estate crash and subsequent Great Recession ...
The property's wood-burning fireplace, French doors, vaulted ceilings, and secluded location clearly made it worthy of the comedian and actor extraordinaire's attention.
Penn 1 (originally One Penn Plaza and stylized as PENN 1) is a skyscraper in the Midtown Manhattan neighborhood of New York City. It is located between 33rd Street and 34th Street , west of Seventh Avenue , and adjacent to Pennsylvania Station and Madison Square Garden .
Although the hotel's owners claimed that (212) 736-5000 was "the oldest continuously in-service telephone number in New York", [268] the veracity of this claim is disputed. [269] [270] Phone numbers in New York City existed as early as the 1880s, [269] and the phone number may have been changed at some point before 1992. [270]