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The Mount Vernon Hotel Museum & Garden, formerly the Abigail Adams Smith Museum, is a historic antebellum building at 421 East 61st Street, near the East River, on the Upper East Side of Manhattan in New York City. It is open to the public as a museum. As of June 2023, the museum is open for tours on selected weekdays.
The Hotel Beacon is a Beaux-Arts, 24-story building on the Upper West Side of Manhattan in New York City, designed by Walter W. Ahlschlager. [3] It was built in 1928 at 2130 Broadway, at the corner with 75th Street, on the site of the Tilden Club House [5] and the Dakota Stables.
The Level Club is a residential building at 253 West 73rd Street on the Upper West Side of Manhattan in New York City. It was built as a men's club by a group of Freemasons in 1927; it served this original function for just about three years. Afterwards, the building was used, in turn, as a hotel and a drug re-hab center.
In the fall, a battle between Upper West Side residents erupted over some 230 homeless men the city had located to the Lucerne Hotel on W. 79th St. amid concerns about coronavirus spread in shelters.
Defunct Asian restaurants in New York City (2 C, 2 P) B. Defunct restaurants in Brooklyn (14 P) E. Defunct European restaurants in New York City (3 C, 1 P) M.
This is a list of notable Jewish delis.A Jewish deli is a type of restaurant serving pastrami on rye, corned beef sandwiches, and other sandwiches as well as various salads such as tuna salad and potato salad, side dishes such as latkes and kugel, and desserts such as black and white cookies and rugelach, as well as other dishes found in Ashkenazi Jewish cuisine.
The Pastrami Queen is a Jewish deli on the Upper East Side of Manhattan which opened as Pastrami King in Williamsburg, Brooklyn before moving to Kew Gardens, Queens [2] in 1961. [3] The kosher restaurant opened in 1956. [4] They've since opened (2020) [5] a location on the Upper West Side [6] considered their flagship location. [3]
The Second Avenue Deli (also known as 2nd Ave Deli) is a certified-kosher Jewish delicatessen in Manhattan, New York City.It was located in the East Village until December 2007, when it relocated to 162 East 33rd Street (between Lexington Avenue and Third Avenue) in Murray Hill.