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The Fort Washington Avenue Armory, also known as the Fort Washington Armory, The Armory, and the 22nd Regiment Armory, is a historic 5,000-seat arena [3] and armory building located at 216 Fort Washington Avenue, between West 168th and 169th Streets, in the Washington Heights neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City.
It was addressed as being on Menin Avenue until 1998, when it became administered by Warrington borough, previously being under Cheshire Education Committee. The college's current name is in honour of clergyman, chemist, and educator Joseph Priestley (1733–1804), a pioneer in teaching modern history and the sciences who is perhaps best known ...
19 Dutch is a residential building in the Financial District neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City. The building was developed by Carmel Partners and was designed by GK+V, with SLCE Architects as the architect of record. [1] GK+V also designed the nearby 5 Beekman. [2] The building contains 482 units and retail space on the first several ...
Waddington is a town in St. Lawrence County, New York, United States. The population was 2,266 at the 2010 census. ... Halfway House Corners – A hamlet on NY-345 ...
A larger Wawa convenience store with gas pumps is coming to Warrington. But first, an existing Wawa must close. Work is set to begin on the Wawa at 550 Easton Road starting with demolition of the ...
The Rivington Street municipal bath was located on Rivington Street from 1900 to 1975. In the early 1980s, Rivington Street between Essex and Bowery earned notoriety as a "drug supermarket" famous for "having the best drugs in the city." [2] Rivington Street is a cross street to the Lower East Side's main thoroughfares.
In 1989, Columbia University, with the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey as a partner, [2] reached an agreement with the city, [2] and in 1992 it began the process of demolishing the Audubon Ballroom to replace it with a medical research facility. [2]
The first of the houses to be built on East 80th Street was 116. The firm of Cross and Cross, known for other designs in New York of the era such as Tiffany's and the Links Club, built the neo-Federal home for Lewis Spencer Morris, a descendant of Lewis Morris, signer of the Declaration of Independence.