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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.
Harlem: 68: Manhattanville Houses: Manhattanville Houses: June 17, 2024 : 3224-3250 Broadway, 545-555 West 126th Street. 1414-1470 Amsterdam Avenue, 556-578 West 131th Street. 500-520 West 133th Street: Harlem: 69: Claude McKay Residence
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 ...
Grant Houses, a public-housing development composed of ten buildings, is located on the south side of 125th Street, on two superblocks between Broadway and Morningside Avenue, with the site being bisected by Amsterdam Avenue. [138] [202] The six-building Morningside Gardens co-op is located directly southwest of the Grant Houses superblocks and ...
Grant's Tomb, officially the General Grant National Memorial, is the final resting place of Ulysses S. Grant, the 18th president of the United States, and of his wife Julia. It is a classical domed mausoleum in the Morningside Heights neighborhood of Upper Manhattan in New York City , New York, U.S.
Manhattanville Houses is a public housing project in the Manhattanville section of West Harlem, in the borough of Manhattan, New York City. The project is located between Broadway and Amsterdam Avenue , spanning a superblock from 129th Street to 133rd Street and is managed by the New York City Housing Authority .
The Spanish-style stucco at 153 E. 63rd St.,New York, N.Y. 10065 was designed by architect Frederick J. Sterner and completed in 1920, then owned over the years by a series of high-profile tenants ...
The St. Nicholas Historic District, known colloquially as "Striver's Row", [3] is a historic district located on both sides of West 138th and West 139th Streets between Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Boulevard (Seventh Avenue) and Frederick Douglass Boulevard (Eighth Avenue), in the Harlem neighborhood of Upper Manhattan, New York City.