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General Ulysses S. Grant Houses or Grant Houses is a public housing project at the northern boundary of Morningside Heights in the borough of Manhattan, New York City.The complex consists of 10 buildings with over 1,940 apartment units on 15.05-acres and is located between Broadway and Morningside Avenue, spanning oddly shaped superblocks from 123rd Street and La Salle Street to 125th Street.
General Grant National Memorial: ... Harlem River Houses. December 18, 1979 ... List of New York City Designated Landmarks in Manhattan above 110th Street;
Grampion Houses: Harlem: 1 7 35 May 31, 1977: Grant Houses: Manhattanville: 9 13 and 21 1,940 September 30, 1957: Harborview Terrace: Clinton: 2 14 and 15 377 June 30, 1977: Harlem River Houses: Harlem: 7 4 and 5 571 October 1, 1937: Hernandez Houses: Lower East Side: 1 17 149 August 31, 1971: Holmes Towers: Yorkville: 2 25 537 April 30, 1969 ...
The Harlem River Houses is a New York City Housing Authority public housing complex between 151st Street, 153rd Street, Macombs Place, and the Harlem River Drive in the Harlem neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City.
Another development in the neighborhood was Grant Houses, a New York City Housing Authority public-housing development located to the east of Morningside Gardens, across Amsterdam Avenue. [138] Completed in 1956, [ 139 ] it was less successful in racial integration [ 138 ] but was praised by local landlords as a deterrent to urban decay. [ 140 ]
Manhattan Avenue–West 120th–123rd Streets Historic District is a national historic district in the Harlem neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City. It consists of 113 contributing residential rowhouses built between 1886 and 1896.
Row houses on West 138th Street designed by Bruce Price and Clarence S. Luce (2014) "Walk your horses". David H. King Jr., the developer of what came to be called "Striver's Row", had previously been responsible for building the 1870 Equitable Building, [6] the 1889 New York Times Building, the version of Madison Square Garden designed by Stanford White, and the Statue of Liberty's base. [2]
The narrowest part of the East River Greenway in the East Village. The East River Greenway runs along the East Side, from Battery Park and past South Street Seaport to a dead end at 125th Street, East Harlem with a 0.6-mile (0.97 km) gap from 41st to 53rd streets in Midtown where pedestrians and cyclists use busy First and Second Avenues to get around United Nations Headquarters between the ...