Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
North of Wall Street, Broad Street continues onto Nassau Street. The two southernmost skyscrapers in Manhattan are 1 New York Plaza, on the west side of Broad Street, and 125 Broad Street, on the east. The famous neo-Roman facade of the New York Stock Exchange Building and its main entrance is located on 18 Broad Street.
The Broad Street station is the southern terminus of both routes; the next station to the north is Fulton Street. [45] In contrast to the Fulton Street station, which is built on two levels because of the narrowness of Nassau Street, the Broad Street station is wide enough to accommodate both tracks on the same level.
Riverfront Stadium station is a northbound-only stop, and the site of the former stadium is located across Broad Street from the terminus. The station opened on July 17, 2006, when an extension from Newark Penn Station opened to Broad Street station. [ 4 ]
The gauge at French Broad River at Asheville showed the river rise more than 2 feet an hour, from 2.31 feet at 3 p.m. Wednesday to 10.19 feet at 9 a.m. Thursday.
Service at Newark Broad Street ended on April 30, 1967. Under the Aldene Plan, Jersey Central passenger trains on the main line were re-routed to serve Newark Penn Station over the Lehigh Valley Railroad. Newark Broad Street closed, and all passenger service ended on the Newark and New York branch and the Newark and Elizabethport branch. [12] [13]
The station is only served by southbound trains; the nearby Atlantic Street station is its northbound counterpart. It opened on July 17, 2006, as part of the extension to Newark Broad Street station. [4] The station also features two installations of public art by Willie Cole, a native Newarker and African American conceptual and visual artist. [5]
The American Bank Note Company Building is a five-story building at 70 Broad Street in the Financial District of Manhattan in New York City.The building was designed by architects Kirby, Petit & Green in the neo-classical style, and contains almost 20,000 square feet (1,900 m 2) of space, with offices and residences on the upper floors.
In August 1907, for example, a Wall Street lawyer sent an open letter to the newspapers and the police commissioner, begging for the New York Curb Market on Broad Street to be immediately abolished as a public nuisance. He argued the curb exchange served "no legitimate or beneficial purpose" and was a "gambling institution, pure and simple."