UWSA NYC Guide 2009
Edited by: Ian Huff, Jessica Liefl, Marym Karimi This Book has been edited, designed and produced by graduate students assisting the ARCH 192 Design Studio at the University of Waterloo School of Architecture to provide undergraduate studio participants with a companion reader that will assist in broadening their knowledge of the City of New York. All images and content contained within this document has been compiled from a broad range of research sources. Studio Faculty: Rick Andrighetti, Brigitte Luzar, Haji Nakamura, Farid Noufaily, Tim Wickens
Table of Contents History
06
Morningside Heights Upper West Side Central Park Upper East Side Midtown One Midtown Two Lower Midtown Chelsea + Meatpacking Greenwich Village + NYU East Village SoHo + Tribeca Lower East Side Financial District Brooklyn Williamsburg Long Island City
12 14 16 18 20 30 32 34 38 40 42 46 48 52 53 54
Restaurants + Shopping General Information Route Map Manhattan Bus Map System Subway Map Manhattan Subway
56 62 65 66 68 70
##.#
History The area now known as New York City had been occupied by Native Americans for more than 11,000 years before Giovanni da Verrazano, a Florentine hired by the French to explore the northeastern coast, arrived at New York Bay in 1524. The area lay unmolested until English explorer Henry Hudson stumbled on it while searching for the Northwest Passage in 1609 AND claimed the place for the Dutch East India Company. By 1625, the Dutch settlers had established a fur trade with the natives and were augmented by a group that established a post they eventually called New Amsterdam, the seat of a much larger colony called New Netherland. After some to-ing and fro-ing between Britain and the Netherlands, New Amsterdam became the British colony of New York in the 1670s. The port town remained geographically tiny - the area that today runs from Wall St south to the tip of Manhattan. By the time George Washington was sworn in as president of the new republic on the balcony of Federal Hall on Wall St in 1789, New York was a bustling seaport of 33,000 people, but it lagged behind Philadelphia as a cultural capital. Thomas Jefferson later remarked that New York was a ‘cloacina (sewer) of all the depravities of human nature.’ Unlike many settlements in North America, which were laid out in grids from the beginning, New Amsterdam developed in an ad hoc tangle, still preserved in the ant tunnels of the financial district. As the town expanded beyond Wall Street, it continued to lay out its streets haphazardly. It wasn’t until 1811 that New York caught up with modernity when a grid was imposed over Manhattan, from 14th Street on up to the island’s remote wooded heights. Avenues, they decreed, would run straight up the Island, while the narrower and more numerous streets would run at right angles to them. Only Broadway, the old Indian trail that angled across the island,
6. History
survived the rationalizing process. The City Commissioners were ultimately motivated by economic efficiency. “Strait-sided and right-angled houses,” they wrote, “are the most cheap to build . . .” New York boomed in the early 19th century. Its population swelled from 65,000 in 1800 to 250,000 in 1820. The remainder of the century in New York saw even further growth thanks to European immigration, and for businessmen, who took advantage of lax oversight of industry and stock trading during the so-called ‘Gilded Age’. These men built grand mansions along ‘millionaires row’ on lower Fifth Ave. Along Broadway from City Hall to Union Square, multi-story buildings - the first ‘skyscrapers’ - were built to house corporate headquarters. (3) (4) As the city’s population more than doubled from 500,000 in 1850 to over 1.1 million in 1880, a tenement culture developed. The burgeoning of New York’s population beyond the city limits led to the consolidation movement, as the city and its neighbouring districts struggled to service the growing numbers. Residents of the independent districts of Queens, Staten Island, the Bronx and financially-strapped Brooklyn voted to become ‘boroughs’ of New York City in 1898. The one mile stretch from Grand Central Terminal to East 59th Street –the busiest portion of Park Avenue - is a uniquely successful integration of railroad and city. The avenue itself was built over the New York Central lines, and up to 50th Street the buildings along it rise on columns sprinkled among the fan-shaped yards. In the early 1900s, when electric locomotives were introduced, the railroad took audacious steps that not only increased the value of its property many times over but also gave the city a three-dimensional composition that was a major achievement of the City Beautiful era. The terminal itself was made more efficient and compact History .7
by dividing its 67 tracks between two subterranean levels, and Park Avenue north and south of the terminal was joined in 1919 by a system of automobile viaducts wrapping around the station. Between 1900 and 1930 the new metropolis absorbed a huge wave of European immigrants who arrived at New York’s Ellis Island and its population exploded, from just over 3 million in 1900 to 7 million in 1930. During this period, horse-drawn trolleys disappeared as a major network of underground subways and elevated trains (‘Els’) expanded into the city’s outer reaches. As the immigrant population gathered political strength, demands for change became overwhelming and during the Depression a crusader named Fiorello La Guardia was elected mayor. In three terms in office the popular mayor fought municipal corruption and expanded the social service network. Chicago architect Daniel Burnham’s Fuller (Flatiron) Building of 1902 demonstrated the potential of the steel frame for the construction of tall buildings. (8) As a reaction to the tendency of the new skyscrapers to dominate the streetscape and block natural light, a zoning bylaw was imposed in 1916 that established the maximum envelope that all future tall buildings would have to conform. The resulting shape of this envelope lead to the development of the distinctive Art Deco New York skyscraper form. Robert Moses was the master builder of 20th century New York City. Although he never held elective office, Moses was the most powerful person in New York City government from the 1930s to the 1950s. He used a series of appointed positions to remake the city’s landscape through public works projects. Moses often destroyed entire neighbourhoods, displaced hundreds of thousands of people, and contributed to the ruin of the South Bronx, the departure of the Brooklyn Dodgers, and the decline
8. History
of public transit, but Moses was a man with a crusade; he truly believed “cities are for traffic,” and “if the ends don’t justify the means, what does?” Some of his projects include the Triborough Bridge, the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway, the Staten Island Expressway, the Belt Parkway, Shea Stadium, the World’s Fairs of 1939 and 1964 and the Lincoln Centre. By 1959, he had built over 28,000 apartment units. As one of the few world-class cities untouched by the Second World War, New York seemed the place to be. But prosperity wasn’t limited to the city. In the 1950s, highways made access to the suburbs easy and hundreds of thousands of white New Yorkers moved away permanently. While politicians dithered and played to various entrenched constituencies, the city began to slide. TV production, manufacturing jobs and even the fabled Brooklyn Dodgers moved to the West Coast, along with the Dodgers’ crosstown rivals the New York Giants. Like most of the US, New York looked to the West for cultural direction, and eventually corporations began abandoning the city as innovation in communications technology made it possible to do business anywhere. The city’s economic slide led to the threat of bankruptcy in the 1970s, which was staved off only by massive infusions of federal cash. During the neoliberal Reagan years, the city regained much of its swagger as billions were made on Wall St. Ed Koch, the colourful three-term mayor, seemed to embody the New Yorker’s ability to charm and irritate at the same time. But in 1989 Koch was defeated in a Democratic primary election by David Dinkins, who became the city’s first African American mayor. Dinkins, a career Democraticmachine politician, was rightly criticized for merely presiding over a city government in need of reform, though his moves to put more police on History .9
the streets helped curb crime. He was narrowly defeated for a second term in 1993 by moderate Republican Rudolph Giuliani. Thanks to a big drop in crime and the weakness of his Democratic opponents, Giuliani triumphed in the 1997 mayoral election. For the first time in decades the city contemplated huge (and necessary) projects to augment its infrastructure, such as a new rail tunnel under the Hudson River. Meanwhile Times Square underwent transformation from a crime- and drug-ridden redlight district in the 1960s and 1970s to a Disneyfied tourist attraction in the late 1990s. The city became safer and more prosperous, but also more homogenized; the gap between rich and poor widened, and the colourful subcultures that used to give Manhattan its edge began a mass exodus to the suburbs. On September 11, 2001 terrorists flew two highjacked passenger jets into the Twin Towers of the World Trade center, collapsing the entire complex and killing nearly 2,800 people. But the tragedy triggered a citywide sense of unity which persits to this day.
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Manhattan in New York City and is chiefly known as the home of institutions such as Columbia University, Barnard College, the Manhattan School of Music, Bank Street College of Education, the Cathedral of Saint John the Divine, the Riverside Church, Union Theological Seminary in the City of New York, Jewish Theological Seminary of America, Interchurch Center and St. Luke’s Hospital.
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Columbia Columbia University
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Predating the American Revolution, Columbia University is the fifth-oldest institution of higher learning in the US. With a student population of more than 24,900 and a main campus spread across 36 acres in Manhattan, Columbia’s 15 schools and colleges grant undergraduate and graduate degrees in about 100 disciplines, including its well-known programs in journalism, law, and medicine. The Ivy League university’s more than 3,500-member faculty has boasted nearly 70 Nobel laureates.
buildings
Founded as King’s College in 1754
Bernard Tschumi Architects,1999.
Lerner Hall
3
Broadway and 114th
The centre organizes a number of student services and activities previously scattered throughout the campus. Two contextual elevations face Broadway and Butler Library, employing a mix of red brick, pale-colored granite and glass blocks. In plan, the scheme takes an exterior public courtyard that the 1897 master plan (McKim, Mead & White) had envisaged between two buildings, and translates it into a series of enclosed public spaces built around a central atrium. (Source: From New New York)
McKim, Mead, and White. 1895
Low Library
4
Low Library was designed by the architectural firm of McKim, Mead, and White, which was responsible for the design of much of Columbia’s Morningside Heights campus. The library was designed in the neo-classical style, incorporating many of the elements of Rome’s Pantheon. The building is in the shape of a Greek Cross and features windows modeled on those of the Baths of Diocletian. The columns on the library’s front facade are in the Ionic order.
G. L. Heins + J. Lafarge/ R. A. Cram 1892-Present
Cathedral Of St. John The Divine 1047 Amsterdam Ave. at W 112th St
5
This magnificent stone structure, roughly the length of two football fields (larger than Notre Dame and Chartres combined), continues to be a work-in-progress. It is the largest cathedral in the world (St. Peter’s Rome is bigger but not a cathedral). The Cathedral houses one of the nation’s premiere textile conservation laboratories to conserve the Cathedral’s textiles, including works designed by Raphael.
Morningside Heights .13
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The gateway to the UWS is Columbus Circle, where Broadway meets 59th Street, Eighth Avenue, Central Park South and Central Park West—a rare rotary in a city of right angles. A 700ton statue of Christopher Columbus, positioned at the entrance to Central Park, goes almost unnoticed in the shadow of the Time Warner Center across the street, which houses the offices of the media conglomerate, along with luxury apartments, hotel accommodations, upscale restaurants and shops and Jazz at Lincoln Center’s stunning Frederick P Rose Hall. The Upper West Side’s seat of highbrow culture is Lincoln Center, a complex of concert halls and auditoriums built in the 1960s. It is home to the New York Philharmonic, the New York City Ballet and the Metropolitan Opera, along with a host of other arts organizations. The big circular fountain in the central plaza is a popular gathering spot, especially in summer, when amateur dancers converge on it to dance alfresco at Midsummer Night Swing. The Upper West Side is primarily a residential and shopping area, with many of its residents working in more commercial areas in Midtown and Lower Manhattan. It has the reputation of being home to New York City’s liberal cultural and artistic workers, in contrast to the Upper East Side, which is traditionally home to more conservative commercial and business types.
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This project is one of architectural interventions W 51 ST undertaken by the AMNH in the 1990s to reW 50 ST shape the image of the 130-year-old institution. 49 ST the The exhibition program is containedWwithin largest suspended glass curtain wallWin ST 48North America. The cube structure is comprised 47 ST of roof trusses and a system of wallWtrusses supporting its four walls. The floating 46 ST W sphere containing the planetarium is linked by a spiralW 45 ST ing ramp to an exhibition area at its base. W 44 ST
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The original Victorian Gothic building, which opened in 1877, was designed by Calvert Vaux and J. Wrey Mould, it Is one of the largest and most celebrated museums in the world. It comprises 25 interconnected buildings that house 46 permanent exhibition halls, research laboratories, and its renowned library. The collections contain over 150 million specimens. The Museum has a scientific staff of more than 200, and sponsors over 100 special field expeditions annually.
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Calvert Vaux + J. Wrey Mould. 1877
architect
Lincoln Centre
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Building description building description building description building description building description building description building description building description building description building description building description building descriptions
Philip Stark. 2000
Hudson Hotel
356 West 58th Street
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The boutique hotel adopts a� minimalism meets baroque� approach, enter through a solitary door, up an escalator framed within sandblasted glass flooded in chartreuse light, arriving at a 40 foot lobby on the second floor.
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After years of debate over the location, the park’s construction finally began in 1857, based on the winner of a park design contest, the “Greensward Plan,” of Frederick Law Olmsted, the park superintendent, and Calvert Vaux, an architect. Using the power of eminent domain, the city acquired 840 acres located in the center of Manhattan. In the process, a population of about 1,600 people who had been living in the rocky, swampy terrain--some as legitimate renters and others as squatters--were evicted; included in this sweep were a convent and school, bone-boiling plants, and the residents of Seneca Village, an African-American settlement of about 270 people which boasted a school and three churches.
Chosen by the city and the park planners because its terrain was unsuitable for commercial W building, 59 ST the site for the new park offered rocky vistas, swamps which would be converted into lakes, and the old city reservoir. These varied elements would be refined, enhanced, diminished, and eradicated to create a park in the style of European DEpublic WITT grounds, with an uncorrupted CLINTON countryside appearance. To this PARK end, Olmsted and Vaux’s plan included four transverse roads to carry crosstown traffic below the park level. Architectural structures were to be kept to a minimum-only four buildings existed in the original plans for the park--and the design and building material of the bridges were chosen to assure that they were integrated as naturally as possible into their surrounding landscapes.
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New York’s Central Park is the first urban landscaped park in the United States. One of the intentions that drove the conception of the park was to refute the European view that Americans lacked a sense of civic duty and appreciation for cultural refinement and instead possessed an unhealthy and individualistic materialism that precluded interest in the common good. The bruised egos of New York high society envisioned a sweeping pastoral landscape, among which 80 ST W their the wealthy could parade in carriages, socialize, and “be seen,” ST W 79 and in which the poor could benefit 78 ST from clean air and upliftingWrecreation without lifting the bottle. W 77 ST
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01 - Frick Collection. 70th St. E 54 ST 54 ST 02 -WEl Museo del Barrio. 104th St. E 53 ST 53 ST 03 -WMuseum of the City of New York. 103rd St. 04 -WThe Jewish Museum. 92nd St. E 52 ST 52 ST 05 - Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum, Smithsonian Institution. 91st St. E 51 ST 51 ST 06 -WNational Academy Museum and School of Fine Arts. 89th St. 07 -WNeue E 50 ST 50 STGalerie New York. 86th St. 08 - Goethe-Institut New York/German Cultural Center. 83rd St. E 49 ST 49 ST 09 -WThe Asia Society. 725 Park Ave. 8 AVE
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Once 91 ST as the ‘Silk Stocking W known District’, has some of the most RESERVOIR W 90 ST expensive real estate in the United States, ST is believed to be the W 89and greatest concentration of individual W 88 ST wealth in the nation. Until the Park ST W 87 railroad Avenue cut was covered (finished in 1910), the stylish part W 86 ST of the Upper East Side with man85 STtownhouses lay on Fifth sions W and Avenue, bordering Central Park, W 84 ST while the area to the east was a W 83 ST district that included GREAT blue-collar LAWN stables ST breweries. A long high W 82and bluff fronting the river north of BeekST 81 W BELVEDERE CASTLE man Place was dotted with fine NATURE CENTER suburban villas in the nineteenth century, the last remaining one being Gracie Mansion, now home of New York’s mayors.
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Upper East Side HALSTON (MODULIGHTOR) HOUSE 246 E 58th St
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Rudolph’s houses are evidence of his sociability. They’re minimalist, but not cold. Modulightor House, now a museum, was one his last houses. The building’s interior and exterior structure mimic each other: the exterior is a clear view of its structural white I-beams; inside, the staircases, half walls and stairways echo this material, form and color. Much of the furniture was designed by Rudolph as well, including the clear plexi chairs.
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Paul Rudolph. 1989
Marcel Breuer. 1966
Whitney Museum
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945 Madison Avenue
The museum is Located on a 100 x 125 foot site in the mid-town .The housing of changing exhibitions rather than a permanent collection has determined the new museum’s philosophy, planning, and details. This distinctive museum makes the most of its small corner site. Upper floors, affording maximum gallery space within, cantilever outward, importantly over its shadowy forecourt; seven windows, irregularly spaced trapezoids that vary in size, mark its granite facade like symbolic eyes.
Napoleon Lebrun, 1909
The Metropolitan Museum of Art 134 east 17th street
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Represented in the permanent collection are works of art from classical antiquity and Ancient Egypt, paintings and sculptures from nearly all the European masters, and an extensive collection of American and modern art. The Met also maintains extensive holdings of African, Asian, Oceanic, Byzantine and Islamic art.
F. L. Wright. 1959
Guggenheim Museum
1071 Fifth Avenue (at 89th Street)
13
The Guggenheim Museum is an embodiment of Wright’s attempts to render the inherent plasticity of organic forms in architecture. His inverted ziggurat dispensed with the conventional approach to museum design. The open rotunda afforded viewers the unique possibility of seeing several bays of work on different levels simultaneously. It contains ….
Upper East Side .19
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01 - Carnegie Hall, William Burnet Tuthill , 1891,881 Seventh Avenue W 18 ST 02 - Port Authority
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W Mid Town is an area of Manhattan, New York City home to world-famous commercial zones such as Rockefeller E 30 ST 30 ST Center, Broadway, and Times Square.WMidtown Manhattan is home to the city’s tallest and most famous buildings such as the Empire State Building and Chrysler Building. Midtown, along with “Uptown” and “Downtown”, is E 29 ST W 29 ST one of the three major subdivisions of Manhattan that is, all areas between 14th Street and 59th Street, from E 28 ST 28 ST W the the Hudson River to East River, about five square miles. The core of Midtown Manhattan is from about 31st E 27 ST Street to 59th Street Third and Ninth avenues. As New York’s largest central business district, Midtown 27 ST W between Manhattan is indisputably the busiest single commercial district in the United States, and among the most E 26 ST W 26 ST intensely and diversely used pieces of real estate in the world. The great majority of New York City’s skyscrapers, E 25 ST 25 STand apartment towers, lie within Midtown. More than 700,000 commuters work in its including its tallest W hotels offices, hotels, andWretail E 24 ST 24 STestablishments; the area also hosts many tourists, visiting residents, and students. Some areas, especially Times Square and Fifth Avenue, have massive clusters of retail establishments. Sixth Avenue in E 23 ST ST 23 W Midtown holds the headquarters of three of the four major television networks, and is one of a few global centers E 22 ST of news and entertainment. W 22 ST Times Square is also the epicenter of American theater.
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Midtown One The New York Times Headquarters 8th Ave. between 40th and 41st St.
3
This is the first building with curtain wall with ceramic sunscreen to be built in the United States. Ultra clear low iron glass is draped in ceramic tubes to create a skin that reflects light and changes color throughout the day. At its peak, the ceramic curtain wall extends beyond to finish the building in a lacelike crown of white. This graceful feature allows the building that so strongly meets the streets to ephemerally meet the sky.
Times Square
buildings
Renzo Piano Building Workshop. 2006
4
Broadway and 7th Ave.
Times Square is located at the heart of the Theater District. While it has changed drastically in the past decade, a reputation for razzle dazzle and spectacle attached itself to this area Formerly Longacre Square, Times Square entered the nation’s consciousness in 1904, when it was renamed after the New York Times building that became the cornerstone of the new district.
Raymond Hood. 1924
The American Raditor Building 40W 40th St. at 5th Ave.
5
The architect combined Gothic and modern styles in the design of the building. Black brick on the frontage of the building (symbolizing coal) was selected to give an idea of solidity and to give the building a solid mass. Other parts of the facade were covered in gold bricks (symbolizing fire), and the entry was decorated with marble and black mirrors.
David Chipperfield. 1991
The Bryan Park Hotel 40W 40th St. at 5th
6
The meticulous detail of the dark brick along the exterior of this old classic building in midtown contrasts with the interior renovation that has transformed it into an exclusive designer hotel. The project, which incorporates various multi-purpose spaces on the ground floor, stands out for the sobriety of its forms, colors and textures which compose both the public areas and private rooms.
Midtown One .21
buildings
Midtown One Lusby Simpson. 1934
Bryant Park
455 5th Ave. at 42nd Street
7
Situated behind the New York Public Library is Bryant Park, a well-cultivated retreat that hosts a dizzying schedule of free entertainment during the summer, including the popular Monday night outdoor movies. The park also boasts free wireless access. It is named after newspaper editor William Cullen Bryant of the erstwhile New York Post, and also famed as a poet and instigator of Central Park.
Carrere + Hastings. 1911
New York Public Library 5th Ave. at 42nd
8
The New York Public Library’s main building is the work of Beaux-Arts architectural firm Carrere and Hastings. Its status as one of the world’s leading libraries is confirmed by its possession of a Gutenberg Bible and a Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica. Two massive stone lions, dubbed Patience and Fortitude flank the main portal. Free daily tours stop at the beautifully renovated Rose Main Reading Room and the Bill Blass Public Catalog Room.
Skidmore Owings + Merill. 1954 Manufacturers Hanover Trust 510 5th Ave.
9
Clear structural composition and carefully designed details characterize this pristine modernist building. The unobstructed view of the vault door and banking rooms from Fifth Avenue indicated a new trend in bank design at the time of the project’s completion in 1954.
McKim Mead and White. 1893
Bowery Savings Bank 130 Bowery
10
One of New York’s last grand bank buildings, this Romanesque Revival tower has a solid masonry exterior with a grand arched entrance that symbolize the strength and permanence of one of New York’s oldest banks. The building’s magnificent central banking hall, modeled on the nave of a Romanesque church, is decorated with rich materials and Art Deco ornament that pay homage to New York’s booming economy in the 1920s.
22. Midtown One
Midtown One Chrysler Building
405 Lexington Ave. at 42th St.
11
This gleaming building pays homage to the automobile. Architect William Van Alen outfitted the main tower with colossal radiator-cap eagle ‘cargoyles’ and a brickwork relief sculpture of racing cars complete with chrome hubcaps. The entire seven-storey pinnacle, complete with special-steel facing, was first assembled inside the building, and then hoisted into position through the roof opening and anchored on top in just one and a half hours.
buildings
William Van Alen. 1930
Whitney Warren. 1913
Grand Central Station 42nd & Park Ave.
12
The functional scheme of the terminal and its approaches is housed in an imposing Beaux Arts Classical structure. The main façade, facing down Park Ave., is a fine symmetrical composition of triumphal arches, filled in with glass and steel, surmounted by a colossal clock. The simple interior ceiling vault, 125 feet across, and decorated with the constellations of the zodiac, is hung from steel trusses. Visit during rush hour for full effect.
Emery Roth & Sons + Walter Gropius. 1963
MetLife Building (Panam) 200 Park Ave.
13
This 60 storey building is an example of an International style skyscraper. It is purely commercial in design with large floors, simple massing, and an absence of ornamentation inside or out. The Pan Am Building was the largest commercial office building in the world when it opened on March 7, 1963. It is an important part of the Manhattan skyline and one of the fifty tallest buildings in the United States.
Warren + Wetmore. 1987
Helmesley Building 230 Park Ave.
14
The building is a 35 story typical slab-sided skyscraper with a distinctive design that includes a means of transporting Park Avenue from street level to the divided aerial highway that passes through the building, and then around Grand Central Terminal to 42nd Street, and then back to street level. The lobby, planned as a corridor connecting 45th and 46th Streets, echoes the magnificence of the exterior.
Midtown One .23
buildings
Midtown One Philippe Stark, 1990.
Paramount Hotel 235 West 46th Street
15
This 600 room hotel serves as the model for the Hudson Hotel. This the hotel to “if you want an experience close to being in an ultramodern and stylish movie.
Philippe Stark, 1988
Royalton Hotel
44 West 44th Street
16
The Royalton Hotel is Philippe Starks’s expression of hotel as theatre. The hotel lobby runs an entire city block, encompassing a minimal interior with a modern interpretation of romance of steamship travel.
Edward Larrabee Barnes, 1983
Ibm Tower
Madison at 57th St.
17
THE 43-STORY Building is a transitional object between the self-imposed severity of high modernism and the new freedom of postmodernism. The building is boldly sculptural rather than structural, a faceted, five-sided chunk of green-gray granite and glass .At the back of the building is a public bamboo filled garden and pedestrian arcade, which becomes an inviting retreat from the noise of the street.
Hugh Stubbins, 1973-78.
Citicorp centre
Lexington & 53rd St.
18
The 59-floor, 915-foot (279-m) building is one of the most distinctive and imposing in New York’s skyline, with a 45° angled top and a unique stilt-style base. It contains 1.3 million square feet (120,000 m²) of office space. The 45-degree angle at the top of the building was originally intended to contain solar panels to provide energy.
24. Midtown One
Midtown One Philip Johnston House
242 E 52nd St. btwn 2nd &3rd
19
The home was primarily intended as a place for social gatherings, and as a modern art gallery for its owner. Its design was based largely on Mies’ sketches for the IIT campus buildings. Designed at a time when Johnson was primarily designing private residences, the Guest House makes use not only of the architectural vocabulary that he favored at the time, but also of the proportions that he would use in future residences.
buildings
P. Johnson w L. Gores F.C. Genz, Architects, 1950
William Lescaze , 1934
Lescaze House
211 E.48th St. btwn 2nd & 3rd
20
The house follows a basic brownstone footprint with a narrow street frontage and is comprised of four stories. The interior follows the logic of the exterior absence of applied ornamentation in favor of austere geometric forms with an emphasis on spare, functional furnishings and technological innovation.
Norman Foster, 2006
Hearst Tower 959 8th Avenue
21
Hearst Tower is the first “green” high rise office building completed in New York City. The floor of the atrium is paved with heat conductive limestone. Polyethylene tubing is embedded under the floor and filled with circulating water for cooling in the summer and heating in the winter. The building was constructed using 80% recycled steel. The triangular framing pattern required 9,500 metric tons of structural steel about 20% less than a conventional steel frame.
Raymond hood, 1931
Mcgraw-Hill Building
330W 42nd St. between 8th & 9th
22
The exterior walls of the building are panels of blue-green terra-cotta ceramic tiles, alternating with green-metal-framed windows, with a strongly horizontal orientation. The building was the only New York building shown in the influential International Style exhibition in 1932, and it’s also been cited as a landmark of Art Deco design.
Midtown One .25
Midtown One
buildings
Williams And Tsien, 2001
The American Folk Art Museum 45 West 53rd St.
23
The 30,000 square foot, 8 story building is clad in sixty-three lightly textured tombasil panels .It is capped by a skylight above a grand interior stair connecting the third and the fourth floors, with dramatic cut-throughs at each floor to allow natural light to filter into the galleries and through to the lower levels. The sculptural facade is the product of a manual fabrication process evocative of the hands-oriented approach characteristic of folk art.
Yoshio Taniguchi, 2004.
MOMA
53rd Street between 5th and 6th Avenues
24
This is one of New York’s best buildings in the international style, which was introduced to America and the world at one of its own exhibitions in 1912. The Museum of Modern Art was founded in 1929, over the course of the next ten years, the Museum moved three times into progressively larger temporary quarters, and in 1939 finally opened the doors of the building it still occupies in midtown Manhattan. Subsequent expansions took place during the 1950s and 1960s planned by the architect Philip Johnson, who also designed The Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Garden. In 1984, a major renovation designed by Cesar Pelli doubled the Museum’s gallery space and enhanced visitor facilities. The new building, engages the public with a 12,400-square-foot lobby that now provides two major entrances to the Museum. On 53rd Street, Taniguchi’s new facade of fritted, gray, and clear glass, absolute black granite, and aluminum panels joins the meticulously restored facade of the 1939 Goodwin and Stone building, Philip Johnson’s 1964 addition, and Cesar Pelli’s 1984 Museum Tower to link MoMA’s past with its future in a street-level panorama of architectural history.
Philip Johnson & John Burgee, 1984
Sony (AT & T)
1984, 550 Madison Ave
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The 40 story tower has an unusual roof (a triangle split at the peak by a concave hollow), and at its base a huge arched entrance, 110ft high, flanked by columns. To conserve energy only a third of its pink granite exterior is covered with windows.
26. Midtown One
Midtown One Austrian Cultural Forum
27
11 East 52nd Street
The building is situated on a plot in Manhattan that is only 24.5 feet wide and 81 feet deep, despite its small footprint it is 24 stories and 275 feet tall. The building’s facade is clad in glass and aluminum and gradually tapers to a narrow point as the building slants upwards. It houses exhibition spaces, a theater, a library, offices, seminar and reception rooms, and apartments for the officers of the institution.
buildings
Raimund Abraham, 2002
Zion And Breene, 1967
Paley Park
28
5 East 53rd Street
The park measures just 4,200 square feet but it offers a quiet urban oasis in the midst of the city by the careful use of falling water, airy trees, lightweight furniture and the simple spatial organization. It is surrounded by walls that are covered in ivy on three sides and opens to the street (with an ornamental gate) on the fourth side. The overhead canopy formed by locust trees creates a serene landscape.
Sasaki, Dawson, Demay Asoc , 1971
Greenacre Park
29
1971 – 217 E 51st St
With a 25-foot-high waterfall cascading over the rear wall, skillfully landscaped trees and plantings, an outdoor cafe, and shady arbors, the park was designed to make the most of its small size and to provide New Yorkers with “some moments of serenity” .Branches of honey locust trees dangle overhead, and lush plantings are strategically placed at ground level. There are three levels of seating, the lower one dominated by a multilevel waterfall.
John W. Cross of Cross and Cross. 1931
The General Electric Building 570 Lexington Avenue
30
(Formerly the RCA Victor Buildings) The building is a tall 50-floor stylized Gothic tower with its own identity, a classic Art Deco visual statement of suggested power through simplification. The base contains elaborate, generous masonry, architectural figural sculpture, and at on the corner above the main entrance, a conspicuous corner clock with the curvy GE logo and a pair of silver disembodied forearms. The crown of the building is a dynamic-looking burst of Gothic tracery which represents radio waves.
Midtown One .27
buildings
Midtown One Schultz & Weaver, 1931.
Waldorf Astoria Hotel Park Avenue & 50th street
31
The Waldorf-Astoria Hotel is a famous luxury hotel in New York. It has been housed in two historic landmark buildings in New York City. The first, designed by architect Henry J. Hardenbergh, was on the Fifth Avenue site of the Empire State Building. The present building at 301 Park Avenue in Manhattan is a 47 story, 625 ft. (191 m) Art Deco landmark, designed by architects Schultze and Weaver and dating from 1931.
Solan & Robertson. 1929
Chanin Building
122 East 42nd Street
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One of the first great examples of a building that uses the French-inspired art-deco motifs is the Chanin Building. The 56-storey steel frame is clad in buff brick and terra cotta and it is set back in conformance with the 1916 Zoning Law. The top of the buff-brick tower sports elegant buttressing decor. The facade illustrates the introduction of colored glass, stone and metal on the exterior of tall buildings.
Eero Saarinen, 1965
CBS Building
Madison at 57th St.
33
The CBS Building in New York City, also known as Black Rock for the dark granite cladding, is the 38-story headquarters of the CBS Corporation. Unlike some major skyscrapers built in that section of midtown Manhattan during the 1950s and 60s, the pillars are more dominant than the glass windows between them.
Mies Van Der Rohe, 1958
Seagram Building
375 Park Ave. & 52nd St
34
The Seagram Building is generally recognized as the finest example of skyscrapers in the International Style. Much of the building’s success comes from its elegant proportions and its relation to the overall site. The building is set back from the street by ninety feet, and from the side by thirty. The forecourt created uses reflecting pools and a low boundary wall in green marble to set off the building.
28. Midtown One
Midtown One Brasserie
100 East 53th Street
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After a fire ravaged the Brasserie in 1995 the owners selected Diller + Scofidio to redesign the space. After removing all traces of Philip Johnson’s original interior, the rough concrete surfaces of the original space were relined with new skins of wood, terrazzo, tile, and glass. These thin “liners” often lift from their surfaces to become structural, spatial and functional components. The madrone floor peels up while the pearwood ceiling peels down and is molded into seating as part of a continuous wrapper around the main dining space.
buildings
Diller + Scofidio
Gordon Bunshaft/ SOM, 1952
Lever House 390 Park Ave
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Lever House comprises two counter posed rectangular volumes, sheathed in a thin curtain wall of stainless steel and glass, floating on pilotis, the lower volume carrying a roof garden and enclosing a garden-atrium retreat. Its thin, twenty-story tower was small by New York standards but for an International Style building it was unusually large.
Midtown One .29
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5th Ave. & 48th St.
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Radio City has 5,933 seats for it became the largest movie theater in the world at the time of its opening. the interior of the theater incorporates glass, aluminum, chrome, and geometric ornamentation. Deskey rejected the Rococo embellishment generally used for theaters at that time in favor of a contemporary Art Deco style, ST borrowed heavily from a EuroW 10 pean Modern aesthetic style, of which he was W 9 ST exponent at the time. the foremost 6 AVE
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E.D Stone + D. Deskey, 1932.
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Midtown Two Daily News
200 East 42nd St.
39
Its facade features a 3-story granite slab above the entrance that is decorated with an image of office workers underneath a sunburst motif illuminating the News Building rising above. Patterned red and black polychrome brick spandrels and russet window shades alternating with white brick piers, the whole effect to minimize the appearance of windows in the prism. The street floor, outside and in, is ornamented in Art Deco abstractions.
Tudor City
40
In 1925 Fred F. French started construction of what he called ‘The largest project in Midtown’. It was named Tudor City. Completed in 1928, it consisted of 12 apartment buildings containing 3000 housing units and 600 hotel rooms. The design by the architect was based heavily on the Tudor Style, an architectural style prevalent during the Tudor Dynasty. Characteristic for this style is the brickwork and the application of fine intricate stonework.
galleries
H. Douglas Ives. 1925
buildings
Raymond Hood. 1930
Le Corbusier & Niemeyer & Harrison,1947-1953
United Nations Complex 1st Ave. West & East 42nd St..
41
The international style was chosen by the board members as it symbolized a new start after the second World War. A plan by Le Corbusier, known as project 23A, was taken as the basis for the complex. After many months of heated discussions, the final plan 23W, drawn up by Oscar Niemeyer was adopted by all members of the board. It consists of a complex with 4 buildings.
Kevine Roche. 1968
Ford Foundation 320E 43 St.
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The L-shaped mass of the building wrapped around a spacious winter garden, forming a square. The actual envelope of the building is composed of weathering steel facing the structural frame, and pink granite wrapping vertical concrete elements, with large glass panes filling in the voids. Its large tree-filled atrium was the first of its kind in Manhattan, and it is widely credited as setting the precedent for indoor public spaces in Manhattan office buildings.
Midtown Two .31
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T LY ST ES 9 ST E 9 ST PL and local W JAN In theatres thrived in the area surrounding Union Square. In the T the early 1800s, upscale townhouses 2S T BL E 8 ST ST W 1 1850s W 8residences, E S and 1860s, factories and offices replaced the and unionists and abolitionists held massive ralN U EE H T activists gathered, protested and rioted. As recent as the late 1980s andEearly BE lies here. In the 1920s, Klabor 7 ST 1990s, ER WAVERLY PL ST K urban decay tainted the square and its surrounding areas. But today, a lovely park is the centerpiece of a chic ST N WASHINGTON E 6 ST BA neighborhood giants. ST SQUARE ST brimming with restaurants, upscale shops and retail 11 Y E 5 ST W RR PARK W 4 E ST T P S E 4 ST ES W 3 ST RL A T S CH E 3 ST BE ST ER D H 10 FO P W RD TO E 2 ST IS S R T ST BLEECKER ST CH E 1 ST ROW BAR ST ON T R MO W HOUS TON ST ST OY L ER ST ON T Map ##.# RKS NS O T CLA S PRINCE S T OU WH ST G IN ST 1 - Van Allen Institute, 30 w.K22nd ON RLT 2 - Union Square, Frederic Auguste Bartholdi CHA T SPRING ST MS A D VAN T S ING R P S BROOME ST
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32. Lower Midtown + Union Square
NELSON ROCKEFELLER PARK
BER MUL
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Lower Midtown Empire State Building 5th Ave. & 34th St.
3
The Empire State building soars more than a quarter of mile above the heart of Manhattan. Officially 102 stories tall (1,250ft), only 85 stories are rentable space. The others serve for the observatory and the cupola. The later was initially designed to dock dirigibles to the mast. It held the record for tallest building until the construction of the World Trade Towers in 1974.
buildings
Shreve + Lamb + Harmon. 1931
Cass Gilbert. 1928
New York Life Building 51 Madison Avenue
4
The massive building raises forty stories to its pyramidal gilded roof and occupies the full block between 26th and 27th Streets, Madison Avenue and Park Avenue South, a rarity in New York.; the building stands 615 feet (187 m) tall and contains 40 floors. The New York Life Insurance Building was completed in 1928 and combines streamlined Gothic details and distinctly Modern massing.
Napoleon Lebrun. 1909
Metropolitan Life Building 1 Madison Ave. & 24th St.
5
The tower is modeled after one of the best known buildings in history; The Campanile in Venice, Italy. The building served as world headquarters of the company until 2005. It was the world’s tallest building for three years until 1913 when it was surpassed by the Woolworth Building.
Daniel Burnham. 1902
Flatiron (Fuller) Building 23rd St. Broadway & 5th Ave.
6
Like a classical Greek column, its limestone and glazed terra-cotta façade is separated into three parts horizontally. Since it was one of the first buildings to use a steel skeleton, the building could be constructed to 285 feet (87 m). At the rounded tip, the triangular tower is only 6.5 feet (2 meters) wide. The 22-story Flatiron Building is often considered the oldest surviving skyscraper in Manhattan.
Lower Midtown + Union Square .33
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Lower East Side Chelsea + Meatpacking map + background
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34. Chelsea
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W 14 ST Not so long ago, Chelsea was a 9 GR mostly working-class and industrial EE W 13 ST NW neighborhood. Now it’s the epi2 IC W 12 ST LITTLE W 12 ST H center of the city’s gay life, but resiAV E dents of all types inhabit the blocks W 11 ST W between 14th and 29th Streets AV W ER west of Fifth Avenue. There’s a 4 T LY ST ES generous assortment of bars and PL JAN ST 2 T 1 restaurants, most of which are S BL W NE U EE clustered along Eighth Avenue, the TH E KE B R ST main hub of activity. Pioneers such ST NK as Dia:Chelsea led the art crowd BA T ST S 1 1 Y northwards from Soho, and the R W R PE whole western edge of Chelsea is ST S 7 LE now the city’s hottest gallery zone. AR H ST C The far-west warehouse district, BE R ST DF HE 10 a nesting ground for fashionable W OR OP T D IS ST R lounges and nightclubs, is also ST CH W O R seeing more residential use. The BAR T S N most exciting thing to happen to TO MOR Chelsea of late are the plans to turn ST OY a defunct elevated train, known as L ER ST ON T the High Line, into a 1.5 mile long RKS NS CLA STO OU promenade. Chelsea boasts great H W ST G examples of adaptive reuse of older KIN ST # Building ON Other RLT factory and loft buildings, making CHA ST this one of the most interesting and desired areas in Manhattan. The Gallery District is roughly confined byAN 29th DAM V street in the North, 13th street in the South, 11th Avenue in the West, and 7th Avenue in the East. The three blocks T GS with the highest concentration of well known galleries are 22nd, 24th and 25th, between 10th and 11th ave.SPRIN
6 AVE
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Chelsea + Meatpacking Standard Hotel
848 Washington St.
2
The latest creation from André Balazs is a New York branch of his modish Standard hotels. Rising from one of the city’s most sought-after sites, in the heart of the Meatpacking District, two glass-curtain slabs literally jump the tracks of the High Line, the old freight railroad that’s been transformed into a park on stilts. The design spans and expands on a century of modern architecture.
Morimoto Restaurant
88 10th Avenue (16th Street)
3
The bi-level restaurant is separated into a 160-person seated dining area and a 40 person lounge in the lower level. Ando achieves a Zen-like serenity throughout the space by using glass privacy walls between tables, rice paper walls, and an organic ceiling that resembles the raked sand of Eastern rock gardens.
galleries
Tadao Ando .2006
buildings
Andre Balazs .2009
Shigeru Ban .2008
Metal Shutter Houses 524 West 19th Street
4
Shigeru Ban’s Shutter Houses are one part architecture, one part art, and one part poetry. The 9-unit condo located in West Chelsea blurs the line between indoor and outdoor with a perforated metal shutter system that lets residence open and close their spaces. Units range from 1,950 to 3,180-square-feet. The rolling shutters are inspired by Korean delis and Chelsea galleries that use industrial rolling grates to open and close their storefronts.
Frank Gehry .2007
IAC Headquarters
along the West Side Highway in Chelsea
5
The geometric façade has eight skyward arcs of glass that will mimic wind-whipped sails of boats making their way along the Hudson River. The building uses low-iron glass, this removes the normal greenish tinge and allows the glass to appear clearer. People working inside the building will have a clear view of the river and the city. At night, the lights of the building will make the walls seem transparent.
Chelsea .35
Diller & Scofifio + Field Operations. 2001
Highline
6
Highline is an elevated park in the sky built on top of the skeleton of an old rail system. The High Line was originally constructed in Manhattan’s Meatpacking District in the 1930s to lift freight trains off of the streets of Manhattan’s largest industrial district. It is 1.45 miles long and spans 22 blocks, from 34th Street to Gansevoort Street. Abandoned in the 1980’s the High Line went into decay and disrepair and was rediscovered in popular consciousness in 2000, after acclaimed photographer Joel Sternfeld captured the beauty of the industrial relic in photos: overgrown with wildflowers. The City of New York was originally planning to tear down the High Line, but a group formed, called ‘Friends of the High Line’, to protect, preserve, and renovate the High Line. This eventually lead to a design competition, and the commissioning of landscape architects James Corner Field Operations and architects Diller Scodifio + Renfro to rehabilitate this abandoned space into a lush, green, elevated paradise. Construction on the park began in 2006. The first section, from Gansevoort Street to 20th Street, opened to the public in June 2009. The most prominent features of the long and winding park are the preserved rail tracks that poke out through the porous layer of concrete that has been cut away in strips here and there emphasizing a linear aesthetic. Lush shrubbery, reedy grasses and watercolor-hued flowers surround the rust-red tracks in a way that seems deliberate yet natural. Vistas that were unseen to most New Yorkers before, like a view of the clubs in the Meatpacking district from above and peeks into posh lofts are now possible.
buildings
map + background
Lower East Side Chelsea + Meatpacking
36. Chelsea
Chelsea + Meatpacking 2 Perry St.
7
8
galleries
Condo
buildings
Richard Meier
SHoP architects. 2003
Porter House
366 West 15th St.
Adopting an innovative approach at merging the old with the new in the Porter House, SHoP architects fascinate the observer with a play of material, light and proportions, resultantly transforming it from a run-down warehouse to a dynamic new landmark for the city of New York. Porter house is a 10-Story Mixed-Use Condominium with a built area of 51,460 square feet.
Asymptote. 2003
Carlos Miel Flagship 408 West 14th Street
9
The architecture and interior design of this shop generates a dual image that merges contemporary and traditional aspects. The design is based on the Brazilian’s architect’s concepts, synthesizing the objectives of the location, which conceives the shop as the sales point as well as a sophisticated space in which to teach. The interior configuration is achieved through a series of winding lines that define the different areas.
Chelsea .37
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S 1 -Centre For Architecture ,Aia Ny Chapter 536URLaguardia Place. RAY NELSON M 2 -The New School Of Social Research ,Joseph Urban , 1930, 66 West ROCKEFELLER 12Th St. Btwn.5ThPARK & 6Th .65 Fifth Ave.
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Stretching from Houston Street to 14th Street, between Broadway and Sixth Avenue, Greenwich Village’s leafy streets have inspired bohemians for almost ST a century. It’s a place for idle wandering, candlelit dining in out-of-theTRY bars and cabaret venues. LISP way restaurants, and for hopping between Home and writers, nonconformists, ENAto VES RDartists ST T T Ssince H entertainers, intellectuals, and bohemians the turn of the 20th century, Greenwich Village is a happening ST CANAL part WALKER LAIG ST T STsounds from late-night coffeehouses, cafés, experimental theaters, of Manhattan, and at night it comes alive with R E HUB WH ITE ST and music clubs. ST CH ST BEA Urban Pattern , ORE FRANKLIN ST MO T TH entirely IN S L As Greenwich Village was once a rural hamlet, separate from New York, its street layout does not coincide K NOR LEONARD ST AN with most of Manhattan’s more formal grid plan.FRGreenwich Village was allowed to keep its street pattern when TH ST the plan was implemented, which has resulted in a neighborhood whose streets areWOR dramatically different, in layout, from the ordered structure of other parts of town. Many of the neighborhood’s streets are narrow and some curve at odd angles. Additionally, unlike most of Manhattan, streets in the Village typically are named rather than numbered. While there are some numbered streets in the Village, even they do not always conform to the usual grid pattern when they enter the neighborhood.
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Greenwich Village + NYU 3
In a historic neighborhood containing the most impressive cast iron buildings in the world, Pritzker Prize-winning architects Herzog & de Meuron, widely regarded as the world’s most innovative architects, have created an instant landmark. Magnificent triplex townhouse with private gated entrance, private garden, three bedrooms, and four baths. Generously proportioned 23 ft. x 32 ft. great room with wood-burning fireplace designed by the architects.
buildings
Herzog & de Meuron .2005
40 Bond Street
Original 1920’s, Reconstructed 1971
Washington Square
4
Located at the foot of Fifth Avenue, the park is bordered by Washington Square North and is one of more than 1,700 parks in New York City, Washington Square is, along with Central Park, one of the city’s most well-known parks. The 9.75 acre (39,000 m²) park is a major landmark in the Manhattan neighborhood of Greenwich Village, as well as a popular meeting place and center for cultural activity.
Greenwich Village .39
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East Village Academic Building Cooper Union 41 Cooper Square
2
Mayne’s concept for the building is a “stacked vertical piazza contained within a semi-transparent envelope that articulates the main spaces. The “vertical campus” is organized around an open and connected central atrium that rises the full height of the building and is spanned by sky bridges. The juxtaposition of steel and glass in the building’s skin system allows for heightened performance and dynamic composition on several levels
buildings
Morphosis , 2009
Frederick a. Peterson, 1859
Cooper Union Cooper Square
2
Oldest standing steel framed building in America.
.41
UNIVER
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1 -Storefront For Art And Architecture, Steven Holl, 1993. 97BATTERY Kenmare St PARK 2 -Greenwich Street Project By Archi-Tectonics 497 Greenwich St
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Many of the buildings in Tribeca (the Triangle below Canal Street) are large, hulking former warehouses; those n JOfine HN Ssmall-scale near the river, in particular, are rapidly being converted into modern condos, but cast-iron archiT F L TO tecture still stands along White Street and the parallel thoroughfares. You’ll find galleries, salons, furnitureUstores, N spas and other businesses here that cater to the neighborhood’s stylish residents along Hudson and Greenwich Streets. In the 1960s Soho was earmarked for destruction, but its signature cast-iron warehouses were saved by LIBER TY T the many artists who inhabited them. (Urban-planning theorist Chester A Rapkin coined the nameSSoho, for South of Houston Street, in a 1962 study of the neighborhood.) The most noteworthy buildings in the area (72-76 Greene BATTERY Street, between Broome & Spring Streets, and 28-30 Greene Street, between Canal &WA Grand LL ST Streets) are prime PARK examples of the area’s beloved architectural landmarks. EXCHANGE CITY (South of Houston) Beware of confusion in Soho, both North-South and East-West roads are called streets. These THAM twenty-odd blocks between Houston and Canal St.,ESBroadway and West Broadway, contain the city’s quintessential stock of castiron-fronted buildings, a high point 2 PLin urban commercial architectural history. They are, largely, to be noticed not as individual monuments but as parties to whole streets and blocks that, together, make the most glorious urban commercial groupings that New York has 1 PLever seen.
42. SoHo + Tribeca
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SoHo + Tribeca Jacob Javits Plaza 26 Federal Plaza
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The new plaza is reconnected to its surrounding context. The seating for the site is provided on twisting strands of New York City park benches. The double strands of back-to-back benches loop back and forth and allow for a variety of seating. With their complex forms and bright green color, these benches energize the flat plane of the plaza .The benches swirl around 6 foot tall grassy hemispheres that exude mist on hot days.
The Dream House 275 Church Street
buildings
Martha Schwartz Partners
4
Dream House is a Sound and Light installation representing the collaborative efforts of composer La Monte Young and visual artist Marian Zazeela and presented by the MELA Foundation.
Ateliers Jean Nouvel & SLCE Architects. 2007
40 Mercer Street 40 Mercer St.
5
Mercer 40 Residences’ design, marks the most cutting-edge use of glass in a residential building in the United States to date, with color and transparent, filtered and clear glass, and the largest (panes) ever used on a residential project. An acoustical engineer consultant helped design the insulated windows, which muffle street sounds. The windows open down or slide across by the use of a motorized mechanical system.
1857
Haughwout Building 488-492 Broadway
6
Architecturally, the building is fairly typical for the period, with cast-iron facades in an arcaded system with two orders of columns. However, the building’s designers acted progressively by installing the world’s first successful passenger elevator on March 23, 1857. It was a hydraulic lift designed for the building by Elisha Graves Otis. It cost $300 and had a speed of .67 feet/second. The original elevator is still in working condition.
SoHo + Tribeca .43
buildings
Soho + Tribeca
Rem Koolhaas Architect / OMA .2001
Prada Store
50 W57th Street
7
To connect the big basement area to street level, the floor steps downwards in its entire width and rises subsequently to re-connect to the ground level, creating a grand ‘wave’. The oversized stair is used as an informal display space. A platform rotates out of the opposite side, turning the stair into an auditorium. Large metal cages for merchandise are suspended from an overhead track and create singular shopping addresses, like inverted buildings in a street.
Walter Me Maria.1977 The New York Earth Room 141 Woolster St.
8
An interior earth sculpture. 197 cubic meters of earth. 335 square meters of floor space . 56 centimeters depth of material. Total weight of sculpture: 127,300 kilos.
Walter De Maria. 1979 THE BROKEN KILOMETER
393 West Broadway.
9
Composed of 500 highly polished, round, solid brass rods, each measuring two meters in length and five centimeters (two inches) in diameter. This work is the companion piece to De Maria’s 1977 Vertical Earth Kilometer at Kassel, Germany.
Frank O.Gehry Issey Miyake Tribeca , 2001
G Tects
119 Hudson Street
10
This project consists of the renovation of interior and exterior of a space within a typically industrial building in the Tribeca neighborhood. The interior design is based on a prototype shop conceived by the Issey Miyake firm, which includes within its showroom various designers brands. A titanium sculpture designed by Frank O. Gehry dominates the centre of the space.
44. SoHo + Tribeca
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the world’s largest Jewish community, the Lower East Side is now best known for great shopping bargains B RO O K Lthe many shops along Orchard Street, which are well known and delicious food. Bargain hunters will enjoy YN B R G for offering clothing and shoes at great prices. AlongIDother E neighborhood streets you can find great deals on housewares, lighting and linens. Sundays are the best weekend days for visiting the Lower East Side, as many shop owners close on Saturdays to observe the Sabbath. From pickles and knishes to bialys and corned beef FULmany stores and restaurants feature delicious foods reflecting the Jewish heritage of the Lower East sandwiches, TO N Side. The Lower East Side is also home to one of New York City’s most impressive museums, the Lower East Side Tenement Museum. Housed in a former tenement building, the museum offers visitors a glimpse into neighborLIBER T Y STlife during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. hood
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46. Lower East Side
Lower East Side 235 Bowery
2
From the outside, this silvery column is a symbol of an ambitious desire to reflect and participate in the discourse around contemporary art. The New Museum building is a home for contemporary art and an incubator for new ideas, as well as an architectural contribution to New York’s urban landscape. Sejima and Nishizawa have described the building as their response to the history and powerful personalities of both the New Museum and its storied site.
buildings
Kazuyo Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa. 2007
The New Musuem
Bernard Tschumi.2007
Blue Condominiums 105 Norfolk Street
3
The design of the envelope pattern sets the structure apart from surrounding buildings, thus adding a bit of an eclectic attitude to a normally dreary skyline. A mosaic façade reflects the surrounding city, while blending into the sky above. Each of the residential interiors is simple, yet elegant in design, with bamboo or palm flooring, stone counters and tile, stainless steel appliances and cabinets.
Lower East Side .47
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Financial District + Dumbo / Brooklyn Heights The oldest part of the city, the financial district, still holds the original plan laid out by the Dutch settlers. This is a very dense neighborhood with many tall buildings on small streets. Since the city’s earlier days as a fur-trading post, wheeling and dealing has been New York’s main activity, and commerce the backbone of its prosperity. The southern tip of Manhattan is generally known as the Financial District because, in the days before telecommunications, banking institutions established their headquarters here to be near the city’s active port. While this nib is bisected vertically by the ever-bustling Broadway, its east-west thoroughfare known as Wall Street is synonymous with the world’s greatest den of capitalism. The streets around Ground Zero, the former site of the World Trade Center, have been drawing crowds since the terrorist’s attacks of 2001. People come in droves to pay their respects to the nearly 2,800 people who lost their lives.
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1 - New York Stock Exchange, George B. Post ,1903 , 11 Wall Street
48. Financial District
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134 east 17th street
The Brooklyn Bridge (originally the New York and Brooklyn Bridge), one of the oldest suspension bridges in the United States, stretches 5,989 feet (1825 m) over the East River connecting the New York City boroughs of Manhattan and Brooklyn. On completion, it was the largest suspension bridge in the world and the first steel-wire suspension bridge.
buildings
John A. Roebling. 1883
Gordon + Bunshaft + SOM. 1961
Chase Manhattan Bank William and Cedar St.
3
Isamu Noguchi’s Sunken Garden is situated in the open plaza in front of the Chase Manhattan Bank building. The “ground” of the garden is made up of small, light-colored stone bricks. The surface slopes gently, creating a series of low hills and valleys topped by seven black boulders of varying sizes that Noguchi collected from the bottom of the Uji River in Kyoto. Noguchi drew on the concept of Japanese Zen meditation gardens in this work.
Gordon Bunshaft + SOM. 1961
Chase Manhattan Bank William and Cedar St.
4
Isamu Noguchi’s Sunken Garden is situated in the open plaza in front of the Chase Manhattan Bank building. The “ground” of the garden is made up of small, light-colored stone bricks. The surface slopes gently, creating a series of low hills and valleys topped by seven black boulders of varying sizes that Noguchi collected from the bottom of the Uji River in Kyoto. Noguchi drew on the concept of Japanese Zen meditation gardens in this work.
Cass Gilbert. 1913
Woolworth Building 233 Broadway
5
The building’s tower, flush with the main frontage on Broadway, is raised on a block base with a narrow interior court for light. The exterior decoration was cast in limestone-colored, glazed architectural terra-cotta panels. Strongly articulated piers give the building its upward thrust. The Gothic detailing concentrated at the highly visible top is massively scaled, able to be read from the street level several hundred feet below.
Financial District .49
buildings
Financial District
Voorhees + Gmelin + Walker. 1931
Irving Trust Building 1 Wall Street
6
The 50 story, white limestone monument to banking is the acme of Expressionist and modern classical styles in New York. It is also known for its spectacular mosaic lobby.
Ernest R. Graham. 1915
Equitable Building
120 Broadway at Pine St.
7
The building is in the neoclassical style, rising 38 stories with a total floor area of 1,849,394 square feet (176,000 m²). It rises as a single tower with the appearance of two separate identical towers standing side by side, connected by a wing for the whole height of the building, such that it appears in the shape of the letter “H” when viewed from above.
S.O.M. JAMIE CARPENTER World Trade Center [Redevelopment],
8
The new 7 World Trade Center pulls back from the eastern property line, becoming an extrusion of the historic street grid and creates a view corridor to the tip of Manhattan. The glass surface of the tower is animated with light, which evolves naturally by day with the changing exterior conditions and artificially by night with programmed LED projection sequences.
Cesar Pelli. 1988
World Financial Centre 200 Liberty St.
9
The World Financial Center is a complex of buildings across West Street from the World Trade Center site in Lower Manhattan, overlooking the Hudson River. This complex is home to offices of major corporations including Merrill Lynch and American Express as well as Dow Jones and its Wall Street Journal division among others. The entire complex is owned by Brookfield Properties, except for the space occupied by American Express.
50. Financial District
Financial District Battery Park
10
Battery Park is a 25-acre public park located at the southern tip of the New York City .It takes its name from a line of British cannons that once protected the harbor in the late 1600s. One highlight is the Hope Garden (a rose garden with 10,000 specimens) planted in 1992 a memorial to those who have died of AIDS. Other memorials are including one to veterans of World War II, and another for the Korean War.
buildings
architect
UNStudio
New Amsterdam Pavilion
Peter Minuit Plaza at The Battery
11
The pavilion is an ‘outdoor living room’ for spontaneous and scheduled activities, public markets, seating and shade, and an iconic state-of-the-art pavilion for food and information. The pavilion will be unique among the city’s many public spaces– a landscaped intermodal transportation hub of the 21st century, where bicycles, buses, the subway and water transportation intersect with cultural offerings in a singular expression of daring but lyrical design.
Frank Gehry , 2008
The Beekman Tower 8 Spruce Street
12
The project features a 1.1 million sq ft structure sheathed in Gehry’s signature glass and crumpled stainless steel cladding atop a six-storey masonry podium that accommodates a public school, new public open space, and an ambulatory care center for the adjacent New York Downtown Hospital. In addition to 903 market rate rental apartments the project includes,13,000 sq ft of neighborhoodoriented ground floor retail space and 26,000 sq ft of below-grade parking.
Financial District .51
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2 - Brooklyn Promenade 3 - Grand Army Plaza 4 - Brooklyn Museum 5 - Brooklyn Public Library
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Restaurants + Shopping GALLERIES AND EXHIBITS: dan graham exhibit - at the whitney - you must go! See the whitney museum. Pg. 18 The Gagosian Gallery – great private contemporary art gallery 980 Madison Avenue. Manhattan Pg. 18 212.744.2313 Lehmann Maupin – influential contemporary gallery, interior design by Rem Koolhaas 540 W. 26th St. nr. 11th Ave. Manhattan Pg. 34 212-255-2923 Sonnabend Gallery – contemporary art gallery 536 West 22nd Street. Manhattan Pg. 34 212.627.1018 SHOPPING: The Conran Shop - cool furniture accessories and gadgets. 407 East 59th Street at 1st ave. Manhattan Pg. 18 212.755-9079 Urban Centre Books - architecture and design 457 Madison Ave. Manhattan Pg. 20 212.935.3595 Printed Matter – art bookstore - Jorge Pardo redid the interior, Dia’s bookstore is across the street 195 10th Ave. Manhattan. Pg. 34 212.925.0325 Vitra Showroom – (furniture) Interior designed by Linda Roy 29 9th Ave. Manhattan Pg. 34 212.463.5700 Commes des Garçons – high.end Japanese fashion house – entrance designed by future systems 520 W. 22nd St. nr. 10th Ave. Manhattan Pg. 34 212.604.9200 West 14th Street – Take a walk and check out high end labels: Jeffrey’s, Stella McCartney, Alexander McQueen - all have ‘designed’ stores there. Pg. 34 Other Music - Perhaps the best record store around 15 E 4th St. Manhattan Pg. 38 212.477.8150 St. Marks Books - highly recommend it. Great eclectic book selection. 31 Third Avenue Pg. 38 212.260.7853 Strand Book Store Inc - tons of books – feels like an old library – great prices. 828 Broadway. Manhattan Pg. 38 212.473.1452 Uniqlo - Like a Japanese H+M - good value 546 Broadway. New York Pg. 42 917.237.8800 Century 21 - this is the mother of all discount department stores. significantly reduced prices on designer labels. men’s and women’s 22 Cortlandt St. btwn Broadway and Church St. Manhattan, Pg. 48 212.227.9092
56. Restaurants + Bars + Shopping + Etc.
Restaurants + Shopping Beacons Closet - vintage and used clothing/sometimes you find amazing finds 88 N 11th St. Brooklyn Pg. 53 718.486.0816 BARS: Knitting Factory – great live venue 74 Leonard St # 1. Manhattan Pg. 14 212.219.3006 Tonic Bar - live venue, good bar to have a cheap drink before a broadway show 727 7th Avenue. btwn 48th St & 49th St. Manhattan Pg. 20 212.382.1059 Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre – One of the city’s most notorious stand up / sketch comedy venues 307 W. 26th St. nr. Eighth Ave. Manhattan Pg. 32 212.366.9176 gramercy hotel lobby – $20 drinks at the - seriously, the best drink you’ve ever had 2 Lexington Ave, New York, NY Pg. 32 212.920-3300 b bar - cheapest happy hour we found with $2.50 drinks 40 E. 4th St. at Bowery. Manhattan Pg. 38 212-475-2220 heather’s – subway tile walls, tin ceiling, chalk board wall bathrooms 506 E. 13th St. nr. Ave. A Pg. 40 212.254.0979 big bar – very small bar, 7th st btwn 1st and 2nd 75 E. 7th St. nr. First Ave. Manhattan Pg. 40 212.777.6969 phoenix – gay bar in the east village – cheap drinks 447 E 13th St. btwn 1st Ave & Avenue A Pg. 40 New York, NY 10009 212.477.9979 Piano’s Bar & Grill - great atmosphere - two floors- burgers are great - on a street with lots of bars 158 Ludlow St. Manhattan. Pg. 46 212.505.3733 max fish – pool table, strong drinks. Classic LES dive bar. 178 Ludlow St. nr. Houston St Pg. 46 212.529.3959 welcome to the johnson’s – dive bar decked out like a 70’s rec room, including pac man 123 Rivington St. nr. Essex St Pg. 46 212.420.9911 cake shop – coffee. records. Beer. 152 Ludlow St. nr. Stanton St. Manhattan. Pg. 46 212.253.0036 The Back Room – like a speakeasy – drinks served in tea cups. 102 Norfolk St. nr. Delancey St. Manhattan Pg. 46 212.228.5098 the gutter - williamsburg bowling bar. enough said. 200 N. 14th St. nr. Wythe Ave. Brooklyn Pg. 53 718.387.3585 glasslands – williamsburg bar/gallery more for dancing… 289 Kent Ave (between 1st St & Grand St) Brooklyn. Pg. 53 718.599-1450 Restaurants + Bars + Shopping + Etc .57
Restaurants + Shopping the metropolitan - gay bar in williamsburg with patio and fireplace 599 Lorimer St., Williamsburg Pg. 53 718.599.4444 the charleston – in williamsburg - terrible place, but you get a free pizza with every beer 174 Bedford Ave. nr. N. 7th St. Brooklyn Pg. 53 718.782.8717 La Superior - good mexican, williamsburg 295 Berry Street. (between 2nd St & 3rd St) Brooklyn. Pg. 53 718-388-5988 Royal Oak – cool bar, williamsburg 594 Union Ave. Brooklyn. Pg. 53 718.388.3884 Union Pool - good bar, williamsburg 484 Union Ave # A. Brooklyn Pg. 53 718.609.0484 Pete’s Candy Shop - fun bar, williamsberg 709 Lorimer St. Brooklyn. Pg. 53 718.302.3770 FOOD: Burger Joint – great… burger joint. Hidden in the lobby of Le Parker Meridien hotel Le Parker Meridien 119 W 56th St at Sixth Ave. Manhattan Pg. 20 212.245.5000 Brasserie - designed by Diller and Scofidio, at the Seagrams Building. Bit expensive 100 E. 53rd St. nr. Park Ave. Manhattan. Pg. 20 212.751.4840 Lever House Restaurant - designed by Marc Newsom, in the Lever House building. little pricy. 390 Park Ave. Manhattan Pg. 20 212.888.2700 Shake Shack - delicious burgers in the park - try the Portobello mushroom burger Madison Ave and East 23rd St. Manhattan. Pg. 32 (Southeast Corner of Madison Square Park) 212.889.6600 saravana bhavan - vegetarian south indian food 81, Lexington Avenue at 26th. Manhattan Pg. 32 212.684.7755 Highline Thai Restaurant & Bar - good value thai food near the highline - they have takeout 835 Washington St New York. Manhattan. Pg. 34 212.243-3339 Libertador Parrilla Argentina – mid price Argentinean, open grill with bar around it. 1725 Second Ave. Manhattan Pg. 34 212.348.6222 Empire Diner - famous restored 30’s style diner with ok food. The time to eat here is on a Saturday for brunch on a sunny day, just before the galleries open. Good for people watching. 210 10th Ave at 22nd St. Manhattan Pg. 34 212.243.2736
58. Restaurants + Bars + Shopping + Etc.
Restaurants + Shopping Cowgirl Hall of Fame – southwest bbq, fun drinks, loud music, its cheap and in the west village… 519 Hudson St, New York, NY Pg. 34 212.633.1133 The Red Cat - A great and moderately priced restaurant - never been disappointed 227 10th Ave. just north of 23rd. Manhattan New York, NY 10011-4717, United States Pg. 34 212-242-1122 sammy’s – good Chinese place 453 6th ave at 11th. Manhattan Pg. 38 212.924.6688 Little Owl - highly recommended up and comer in the west 90 Bedford St. Manhattan Pg. 38 212.741.4695 PDT (Please Don’t Tell) - cocktail bar hidden inside a hot dog joint in the lower east side -need to reserve. Dress nicely! 113 St Marks Pl. Manhattan. Pg. 40 212.614.0386 max - great italian place on ave b and 4th st 51 Ave B between 3rd and 4th St. Pg. 40 212.539.0111 caracas - fantastic arepas bread – go early, usually very busy 93 1/2 E 7th St. around 1st ave. Manhattan Pg. 40 212.529.2314 la zaragoza - tiny mexican deli on ave A and 13th st -- super cheap and delicious 215 Ave A New York, NY 10016 Pg. 40 212.780.9204 curly’s - vegetarian place on 14th st around 1st ave 328 E 14th St. Manhattan Pg. 40 212.598.9998 Artichoke Basille’s Pizza & Brewery - walk in pizza place on 14th and 2nd (often a big line) 328 E. 14th St., nr. First Ave. Manhattan Pg. 40 212.228.2004 Lucky Cheng’s - restaurant where all the servers are transsexuals or transvestites 24 First Ave, Manhattan Pg. 40 212.995.5500 mama’s - wonderful cafeteria style place with meat and vegetables on 3rd st and ave b 34 Avenue B at 3rd. Manhattan Pg. 40 212.777-5729 Casimir - its french bistro stuff. meat. fish. 103 Avenue B. Manhattan Pg. 40 212.358.9683 L’il Frankies - has AMAZING QUALITY LOW KEY FOOD my fave - they fly in fresh cheese from Italy on Fridays. Wood oven pizza. Pg. 40 21 1st Ave. Manhattan 212.420.4900 veselka - polish place in east village 144 2nd Ave at 9th. Manhattan Pg. 40 212.228-9682
Restaurants + Bars + Shopping + Etc .59
Restaurants + Shopping Frank – old school, home style Italian eatery. 88 2ND Ave. Manhattan Pg. 40 212.420.0202 Momofoku - Japanese Ramen - I’ve heard its just like Tokyo! 171 first ave. btwn 10th & 11th. Manhattan Pg. 40 online reservation: http://www.momofuku.com Cafe Habana - delicious cuban food - great atmosphere 17 Prince St. Manhattan. Pg. 42 212.625.2001 Chibi’s - such a great place for a drink or dinner. Chibi will also be around. get a plum wine on ice or a japanese beer. 238 Mott St. Manhattan. Pg. 42 212.274.0025 La Esquina - downstairs through the employee’s door is a secret restaurant. Eating upstairs on the sidewalk is cool and a very a-typical NYC thing to experience 106 Kenmare St. Manhattan Pg. 42 646.613.7100 cafe habana - great cuban restaurant – small space – great interior 17 Prince St at Elizabeth St. Manhattan Pg. 42 212.625.2002 Rosario Pizza Inc - amazing pizza - especially the simple tomato and cheese one 173 Orchard St. Manhattan. Pg. 46 212.777.9813 pink pony - nice burger place in the lower east side 176 Ludlow St. just south of Houston. Manhattan Pg. 46 212.253.1922 Brown - the food is amazing, and the desserts are the best I’ve seen, and the service is awesome. entrees: 20 bucks. Salads: 16. 61 Hester St. Manhattan. Pg. 46 212.477.2427 Teany - moby’s restaurant - in the East Village is good 90 Rivington St. Manhattan Pg. 46 212.475-9190 Inoteca - great mid price Italian in the LES 98 Rivington St, Manhattan Pg. 46 212.614.0473 Freeman’s- SOOOOOO good! it’s off Freeman’s Alley and they serve wild game. End of Freeman Alley. Manhattan. midprice Pg. 46 212.420.0012 * Thank you to Megan Cassidy, Hannah Kriesworth, and Alex Fernandez for their contributions.
60. Restaurants + Bars + Shopping + Etc.
Restaurants + Bars + Shopping + Etc .61
General Info Hostel Info: Hostelling International-NY 891 Amsterdam Ave., New York NY, 10025-4403 (corner of 103rd St & Amsterdam Ave) (212) 932-2300 www.hinewyork.org The hostel is situated near Central Park and Columbia University, the hostel is in a historic Victorian Gothic-style building on Upper West Side. The nearest subway to the hostel is at 103rd and Broadway - 1 and 9 trains. There is capacity for 624 guests. The front desk is open 24h. There is internet access at the hostel as well as a Café/Bar, store, common rooms, a tv room and a games room. There is also a self-catering kitchen and laundry facilities. Personal lockers are available in each room, but you must bring your own padlock. The rooms are locked and every student will have their own key that will allow you to access both the building and your own room. Sheets are provided, but you must bring your own towels. Instructor’s Hotel address: Days Inn New York 215 West 94th Street New York, NY 10025 (212) 866-6400 Transportation to New York We have two 47-seat buses for the trip. Both have a VHS/DVD player; bring NYC movies! We will only be stopping at the Duty free shop on our return to Cambridge. Immigration You require either one of the following to get into the US: a valid Canadian pas. Note that a driver’s license or birth certificate are no longer considered as proof of Canadian citizenship by U.S. Homeland Security. If you are not a Canadian citizen, you must have both a valid passport from your home country and all necessary travel visas. We advise that you bring an extra photocopy of your passport just in case yours is lost or stolen. You should also bring your student card along as many museums have special student rates. Health Insurance If you have paid full tuition and did not opt out of the student health plan back for insurance, then you are automatically covered under the university policy. You may also be covered under your parents or a personal plan. You will be responsible for the payment of all medical charges while in the U.S., and can the claim for a refund once you return to Canada. Please see details at http://www. ihaveaplan.ca/rte/en/UniversityofWaterlooundergraduatestudentsFEDS_Home
62. Info
General Info Money Try to bring at least a small amount of cash to start with. Credit cards and Interac withdrawals are a good way to deal with foreign currency once there. Traveler’s cheques are also an option, but there may be difficulties cashing them in some locations, and banks may be closed on weekends. Debit cards may not always work in the U.S. Expenses The field trip fee covers all accommodation for the 4 nights as well as transportation to and from New York, and one group tour. The fee does not cover other food expenses, public transportation and visits outside the schedule. Drinking Age The legal drinking age in New York is 21. Bathrooms The best place to go if you need the washroom while you are out is a Barnes and Noble, a Starbucks or a McDonalds. They are usually pretty relaxed about allowing you to use their facilities. There are also washrooms in Grand Central and in most large parks. Transportation: Walking The best way to see New York City is on foot. It is however a long walk from the Hostel to downtown. As a rule of thumb, one mile is equivalent to about 20 northsouth blocks or 8 east-west blocks. It takes roughly 2 minutes to walk a short block and 5 for a long one. Subway One of the first things you should do when arriving in New York is to ask a subway ticket office for a New York Subway Map. This is an invaluable reference as the subway system is quite complex. Getting around New York is extremely fast by subway but please note that many subway lines are express lines meaning that they only stop at specified stations,. The A line which is near the hostel is one of these express trains. All express lines eventually meet with non-express lines but it may be that you have gone too far and will have to wait for another train in order to backtrack. Always know what train you are on and plan which stop you will be leaving the train or transferring. Taxi You should probably ride at least one cab in New York. Yellow medallion taxis are the only vehicles permitted to pick up fares on the street. Never enter an unsolicited “car service” vehicle offering to take you to your destination. Fare starts at $2.00, 50¢ extra from 8pm-6am. Tip 10-15%.
Info .63
General Info Customs After each absence of 48 hours or more you can claim up to CAN$400 worth of goods without paying any duties. You must have the goods with you when you arrive in Canada. If you are 19 or over, you can include limited quantities of alcoholic beverages as part of your personal exemption. You are allowed to import only one of the following amounts of alcohol free of duty and taxes: 1.5 litres (53 imperial ounces) of wine or 1.14 litres (40 ounces) of alcohol, or a total of 1.14 litres (40 ounces) of wine and liquor; or 24 x 355 millilitre (12 ounce) cans or bottles (maximum of 8.5 litres) of beer or ale. Safety Crime rates in New York have dramatically since decreased 1993, making it one of the safest large cities in the nation. Follow these simple tips while touring New York City: Try not to look too much like a tourist. Pack casual clothing for the trip. Do not peer into large maps on street corners, wear expensive jewelry or wear a camera around your neck. Avoid large backpacks. Do not leave your bag unattended. Do not carry a bag that dangles from the shoulder as can be easily yanked off by someone coming up from behind. Keep your money hidden. Minimize the amount of money and credit cards that you carry with you on a daily basis. Divide your money between pockets and bags. As in all big cities, try to avoid unlit and desolate places. When going out at night, stay in groups or take a taxi. Arrange a buddy system with a friend and always watch after each other. Use common sense. If you find yourself walking into an area of the city where there seem to be less and less people, it is advisable that you turn around and retrace your steps. Be familiar with your surroundings (street names, landmarks, etc.). This specific information may be needed to locate you. Carry a cell phone. When possible, call 911 if you are being harassed. Always carry enough money for a taxi.
64. Info
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190 St
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181 St
WASHINGTON BRIDGE
181 St
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W 177 ST
GEORGE WASHINGTON BRIDGE BUS STATION 175 St
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W 147 ST W 146 ST
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W 145 ST
145 St
W 14 3 S T
96
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W E S T E N D AV
57
W 60 S T
A M S T E R D A M AV
66 St Lincoln Ctr
63 ST
20
62 ST
5 Av / 59 St
Columbus
B D Circle
N Q
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57 31
57 St R W
W 57 S T
11
50
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59 St
4 5 6
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32
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Y O R K AV
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N R
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32
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57
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51 St
50
27 50
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Q
101 60
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Lexington Av / 53 St
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32
6
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102
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7 W 53 ST
50 St
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W 53 ST
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W 57 ST
57
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20 50 St
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6 57 St F
7 Av
10 11
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30
30
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31
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W 58S T
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72 66
66 66
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1 AV
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1
W 65 ST
W 57 ST
6
10 W 66
PA R K AV
66
30 72 E 72 S T
68 St Hunter er College e
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MAIN ST
7 2S T E 72
B C
72 St
PA R K AV
66. Manhattan Bus Map
JOHN JAY PARK
UPPER EAST SIDE
Y O R K AV
W 72 ST
E 79 ST
6
77 St
11
104
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5 AV
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AY
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79
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79
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M A D I S O N AV E 84
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57
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81 St - Museum of Natural History
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86
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11
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86 St
L E X ING T ON
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7
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86 St
W 8 1 ST
79 St
102
98
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101
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106
106
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1 AV
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86
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103 St
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Chambers St
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Essex St
ST
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20
Canal St
LAFAYET
1
Franklin St
ST
Canal St
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ST
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B D
Grand St
103
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BROOME
Bowery
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Delancey St
OR C HAR
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Canal St
W ST
6
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GRAND ST
Canal St
ST RIVING TON
DELANCEY
39
F
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ST
ST STANT ON
B
ST
ST
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BROOME ST
A C E
VAR
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Spring St
Lower w East Side 2 Avenue
FO RSYTH
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1
Canal St
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ST
20
SPRING ST
E 3 ST
N E HOUSTO
F V
B D F V
BroadwayLafayette St
C ENTR E ST
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20 L ST
W
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14A
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ST MOTT Y ERR MULBST
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6 Bleecker St
21 Prince St
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W HOUSTON ST
1
5
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103
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21 E 7 ST
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W 14 ST
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W 17 ST
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1
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W 18 S T
18 St
WATERSIDE PLAZA
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23 St
W 23 St
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W 20 ST
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1
W 18 ST
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W 19 ST
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PA R K AV
23 St
C E
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34 E 33 S T
28 St
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W BR OAD WAY
8 AV
1 0 AV
9 AV
23 St
W 24 S T
W 21 ST
E 36 S T
ST
W 26 S T
W 25 ST
W 23 S T
N R W
7
E 42 ST
E 38 S T
33 St
UNITED NATIONS
104
EA
28 St
28 St
W 28 ST
50
MURRAY AY HILL
6
W 30 ST
1
W 26 S T
W 24 ST
16 4
Q
32
W 32 ST
S T W 31 ST
W 30 ST
W 27 S T
V N Q
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PATH
W 31 S T
W 28 S T
E 40 S S T E 39 ST
27
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A C E
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W 34 ST
W 32 ST
W 29 S T
5 6
98
27 E 44 S T
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4 5 6
5
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1 2 34 St Penn 3 Station
34 St Penn Station
7 AV
1 1 AV
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20
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W 35 ST
W 30 ST
11 AV
Q W
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15
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E 47 ST
103
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W 36 ST
6 7 10
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102
CHURCH ST
1 1 AV
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11 W 37 ST
34 34
1 1 AV
1 2 AV
11
AY
42
W 39 ST W 38 ST
DW BROA
W 40 ST
JAVITS CENTER
N
4
7
101
103
Grand Central METRO M 42 St
E 49 ST
ST
W 42 ST
4
5 Av
101 GRAND CENTRAL 102 TERMINAL
104
42
Times Sq 42 St
2 3
L E X I N G T O N AV
Park
2 3
P A R K AV
F V
42 St
7 Bryant
3
27 50
IRVING PL
W 43 S T
42
B D
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Brooklyn Bridge City Hall
Stapleton SILVER LAKE PARK
CLOVE LAKES PARK
7•LIRR
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Hunters Point Av
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B •D
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70. Manhattan Subway Map
NS B L VD
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B OA DWA Y
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1
1
DE L A
Grand St
J Broad St M J•M•Z Z RL ST
Bowling 5 Green
G
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J M Z
LOWER EAST SIDE
J •M •Z
Rector St R •W
V
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4 •5
4 •5
PORT RICHMOND
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FINANCIAL DISTRICT
Wall St
PA R S O
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2
82
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EAST RIVER PARK
S Broadway-Nassau
South Ferry
LIBERTY ISLAND
V
Q33
VD
Metropolitan Av G
ST 4 ST
A •C •J •M •Z 2• 3 • 4 • 5
R •W
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NS
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1
D
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Vernon Blvd Jackson Av
2 ST
J
ST
Rector St
R
TM DI
G
N • Av W
N 7 ST
Chambers St
E
Cortlandt St s-bound
J M
2•3
E
QUEENS MIDTOWN TUNNEL
CA NA L ST CHINATOWN BWAY ST N E SO DI MA
6
36
E •V
Av 1 L
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J •M •N •Q R •W •Z •6
C H URC H S T
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World Trade Center
S
M60
G
N • Av W
GREENPOINT
6 LITTLE ITALY
SOHO
N •W
23 ST
W
Spring St
Chambers St A•C City Hall R•W Park 6 Place
1 •2 •3
AIN
LVD R IA B A ST O
30 Av
G
ST
ST
1
5
B
GRAND ST
A •C •E
Franklin St
PL
ASTORIA
39
7
W Q N Q Av 3 L
Canal St Canal St
1
45 Rd Court House Sq
ALL EN
CE
E
RIKERS ISLAND
N •W
E V
HOUSTO
Spring St
AV
RY
East River
N•W•7
AV A
ST
N •R •W
O
Broadway
23 St–Ely Av
AV B
BLEECKER
Prince St
ST
BR
Queensboro Plaza
Long Island City
6
KN
UC
HUNTS POINT
St St s 3 ry’ 14 a E t M Av S6 s es pr Cy
N
A•B•C•D•E•F•V NOHO
•
BR
6
E 149 St
21 St
Astor Pl
N •R •W
W 4 St Wash Sq
Chambers St BATTERY PARK CITY
8 ST
WASHINGTON SQUARE PARK
IC K
Canal St
8 St NYU
F•V 9 St
VA R
ST LT ON ST NG CHAR SPRI
TRIBECA
6
6
Y
Longwood Av X
AV
14 St
F V
1 2 3
1
N ST
•
14 St
S I X TH A V
GREENWICH VILLAGE Houston St
L HOLLAND TUNNE
AV
IT
1 AV
ST
r St ophaen Sq d Christ 1 Sheri
CAN AL ST
•
W4 ST
ST
H PAT
TO HOUS
51 St50 ST
2 AV
Christopher St
N WIC H
G
B 23 St NRW D
PW
6
ROOSEVELT ISLAND
Lexington Av/53 St E•V
Y ER W BO ST LA FA Y ET TE
ER
GR EE
EX
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6
F
59 ST
4 •5 •6
3 AV
C E EE CK
E RN BA
EL
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F
28 St
Y
RK VER PA
H WI C EE N
ON RI
T
BL
W
PROS
66 ST
PA RK AV S
1 •2 •3
A
MADISON AV
GR
TS
HUDS
WES
K ST
RD
6
6
A DW
14 St
A•C•E
N•RI •W
23 St
F •V
H
6
LONG ISLAND CITY
33 St
A
11 AV
18 St 1
6
28 St
23 St
CHELSEA
1
33 St
RO B
1
23 St
C •E
5 AV
AV
28 St
23 St
14 St
B •D •F •V
• • BDF N•Q•R•V•W
AV
SOUNDVIEW
Whitlock Av
41 AV 21 St Queensbridge
t el ev d os lan Ro Is F
Lexington Av/59 St
Grand Central 5 Av 42 St 7 4 42 St except S Bryant Pk 5 S•4•5•6•7•Metro-North
SEV EN TH AV
1•2•3•LIRR
EA
NS
72 ST
B • D •F •V
Penn 34 St Station Herald Sq
E IG H TH A V
12
A•C•E•LIRR
L
RI C H O D TE M N
2 AV
S
9 AV
10 AV
34 St Penn Station
N •R •W
47–50 Sts Rockefeller Ctr
Times Sq 42 St
6
EW
N •W
63 ST 68 St Hunter College
5 3 ST
E •V
A•C•E N •Q •R •S •W •1 •2 •3 •7 except S 34 St
MARINERS HARBOR
AI
n-bound
W
ND VI
Astoria Blvd
5 Av/59 St 59 St
F
5 Av/53 St
N •R •W
6
6
Morrison Av Soundview S
M60 LGA Airport
79 ST
3 AV
12 A V
7
42 St Port Authority Bus Terminal
SOUTH
57 St
SIXTH AV
1
AY DW
southbound only
PORT HOWLAND IVORY HOOK
PL
49 St
6
6
Castle Hill Av
6
RD
Westchester Sq East Tremont Av
Parkchester
OU
WN
Zerega Av
6
T RD
St Lawrence Av
N •W
1 AV
OA BR
E IG H TH A V
50 St
C •E
ST
Astoria Ditmars Blvd
N•R•W 60 ST
PARK
RD
AV NT
PARKCHESTER 2
O
6
66 ST
57 St-7 Av
O EM TR
POR
ET
M60 Q33 Q47 Q48 Q72
UPPER EAST SIDE
6
N •Q •R •W
Am
DL ID
LAGUARDIA AIRPORT
77 St
72 St
50 St
CE R RA
Av
B •C
B •C
B AN
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4 •5 •6
B •C
CENTRAL
k tra
E
Elder Av
86 St
86 St
1
23 ST
k
6
WEST SIDE
50 ST
oo
MANHATTAN
96 St
81 St–Museum of Natural History LINCOLN TUNNEL
53 ST
M
6
AV RK PA AM S B RI DG E
B ER T F KE N NED Y BR I D GE
B •C
A •B •C •D •1
6
20 AV
6
96 St
59 St Columbus Circle
Buhre Av
RANDALLS ISLAND
YORK AV
66 St Lincoln Center
EAST HARLEM
103 St
on g t t xin 3 S Le v/6 F A
1 •2 •3
IS
UN I ON
6
6
SECOND AV
AV
1 2 3
72 St
6
110 St
6
5 6
L EXINGTON AV
1
2 •3
PARK AV
END
79 St
6
6
Pelham Bay Park
6
Central Park North (110 St) 4
B •C
CENT R A L P A R K WE ST COLUMBUS AV
B ROADWA Y
1
116 St
MADISON AV
WEST
86 St
4 •5 •6
2 •3
FIFTH AV
1 •2 •3
125 St
116 St
103 St
A C B D
96 St
M60
2•3 • M60
2 3
AV
P WY
H EL
P
Y W PK
AM
Hunts Point Av
FIRST AV
1
S
6
125 St
B •C
AV
R I VE RS I DE DR
103 St
LA
ST
E 13 8 3 Av 138 St BRUC KNER E
6
THIR D A V
1
HO
4 •5
2 •3
LaGuardia Harlem 125 St Airport
Cathedral Pkwy (110 St)
AMSTERDAM
Cathedral Pkwy (110 St )
NIC
B •C
138 St–Grand Concourse
4
135 St
6
Br
116 St
M60 LaGuardia Airport
1
25 •
3
HARLEM
ST
S AV ST ANN
125 St
A •B •C •D
3 Av–149 St
M
R OR
6
2 •5
MOTT HAVEN
V
AV
G
WI L LI
17
Simpson St
Melrose Intervale Av d •5 163 2 ST an Gr e Prospect Av t– rs 2•5 S cou 9 Jackson Av 14 on • 5 C • 4 THE HUB 2•5
145 St
t M60 LaGuardia Airpor
116 St Columbia University
2 •5
E 16 9 S T
R AV
125 ST
135 ST
135 St
B •C
IT E
Y
1
3
2• 5
2 5
V
Middletown Rd 5
E 180 St
Freeman St
MORRISANIA
RIN
NA
Pelham Pkwy
5
2 •5
M O NT P KW Y
WA
TO
5
5
T AV
2
( LEN O X AV) MALCO L M X B LVD
125 St
ST NICHOLAS AV
B R O ADWAY
1
BD •
D
ADAM CLAYTON POWELL BLVD (7AV)
A •B •C •D
137 St City College
167 St
Harlem 148 St
145 ST
RE C LA
WEBST E
HW
145 St
UPPER WEST SIDE
HIGHBRIDGE
YankeesE153 St
r
1
D B •D
ER
Morris Park
TR EMO N
L AL
5
2 •5
174 St
170 St
3
FREDERICK DOUGLASS BLVD
B
B •D
B
rush
4
t S m 61 iu • 4 1 d • D ta B S ee k Yan
ve
E DR
145 St
C
TREMONT
174–175 Sts
4
5
•
Tremont
B •D
4
B
1 80 S T
Tremont Av
167 St
Ri
AV
R IV ERSI D
SH FT WA
Amtrak PARK RIVERSIDE
157 St
1
1
B •D
170 St hours
5
Bronx Park East
BRONX ZOO
W E est Tr Fa em rm on s S t q 2 Av
182–183 Sts
4
Mt Eden Av
Harlem
168 St
C A •C •1 A •C
Fordham
A
W
THE BRONX
Gun Hill Rd
2 •5
FORDHAM
4
HAMILTON BRIDGE
A
RIVERBANK STATE PARK
4
176 St
WASHINGTON BRIDGE
175 St WASHINGTON HEIGHTS
4
AV
E
Pelham Pkwy
B •D
CITY
BAYCHESTER
RK
WH
1
183 St
Burnside Av
Morris Heights
HIGHBRIDGE PARK
181 St
4
RD
IA A V
1
B •D
Fordham Rd
THIRD A V
A
1
191 St
AM DH FOR
G R AN T
A
181 St
University Heights
Dyckman St
AV
V AY BRO AD W NA TO NG SH I F O RT W A
GEO. WASHINGTON BRIDGE
LE
4
AV
A
Kingsbridge Rd
Kingsbridge Rd
UNIVERSITY HTS BR
1
BU
2
2 •5
A
G NA
190 St
4
Fordham Rd
207 St
GE ID
C R OTO N
A
1
G
Gun Hill Rd
2•5
Botanical Garden
1
1
A
Dyckman St
ID BR
AY
2•5
Norwood 205 St D Burke Av B 2 •5 Bedford Pk Blvd B •D Allerton Av
4
25 S T
Marble Hill 225 St
Marble Hill E
W
Mosholu Pkwy
5
222 ST
219 St
Williams Bridge
D
Bedford Pk Blvd Lehman College 2
215 St
Inwood 207 St
A
D OA
4
Y
R
SO
1 KINGSBRIDGE
AV
231 St
1
Metro-North
RK PA
C O RTLAN D T
VA
238 St
IN
Woodlawn
VAN CORTLANDT PARK
W PK
Spuyten Duyvil
LU
IR W
S HO
E PE ND E NC E AV IN D
V PALI SA DE A
31 S T
Subway Map
1
225 ST
225 St
2 •5
L AC ON
MO
Van Cortlandt Park 242 St RIVERDALE
4
AR TO
Baychester Av CO-OP
2 •5
1
CIT Y
-OP CO
5
233 St
Woodlawn
Ca
Riverdale
2 •5
TC
AY W
W 254 S T
ES
AD
AV
O BR
LE
N
Nereid Av
W
DA ER RIV
Wakefield 241 St
5
BOROUGH