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The Turtle Bay Gardens Historic District is a collection of twenty rowhouses in the Turtle Bay neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City.They consist of eleven houses on the south side of 49th Street and nine on the north side of 48th Street, between Second and Third Avenues.
Second Avenue is located on the East Side of the New York City borough of Manhattan extending from Houston Street at its south end to the Harlem River Drive at 128th Street at its north end. A one-way street, vehicular traffic on Second Avenue runs southbound (downtown) only, except for a one-block segment of the avenue in Harlem .
Step street at West 229th Street, Bronx, New York A step street is a thoroughfare fitted with steps for pedestrian traffic rather than paved or tracked for motor vehicles. It is a practical way of providing access up and down a slope that is too steep for automobiles.
In the mid-1980s, the store received a new name, 32 Mott Street General Store, and in 2003, it closed in the aftermath of September 11, 2001, The New York Times reported.
West 167th Street step stairs, also known as the "Joker Stairs" The stairs in early February 2024The West 167th Street Step Stairs, colloquially known as the Joker Stairs, are a step street connecting Shakespeare and Anderson avenues at West 167th Street in the Highbridge neighborhood of the Bronx in New York City. [1]
[25] [32] [41] Money from the 1951 bond measure was diverted to buy new cars, lengthen platforms, and maintain other parts of the aging New York City Subway system. [ 38 ] [ 42 ] Out of a half-billion-dollar bond measure, only $112 million (equivalent to $1.31 billion in 2023), or 22% of the original amount, went toward the Second Avenue Subway.
On a crisp fall Sunday in New York City, around 30 women gather in Central Park. Most of them are young professionals, their ages ranging from early 20s to 40s, and many are recent city ...
The Orpheum Theatre, formerly Player's Theatre, is a 299-seat off-Broadway theatre on Second Avenue near the corner of St. Marks Place in the East Village neighborhood of lower Manhattan, New York City. The theatre is owned by Liberty Theatres, a subsidiary of Reading International, which also owns Minetta Lane Theatre. [1]