Share your personal goals, dreams and wishes and they'll be added to the confetti that will flutter down onto the streets of Times Square on New Year’s Eve.Submit your New Year's wishes here.
Share your personal goals, dreams and wishes and they'll be added to the confetti that will flutter down onto the streets of Times Square on New Year’s Eve.
If there's a fresh coat of paint at your subway station, the bigwigs are on their way.
A letter to Mayor Bloomberg to meet due to the corruption and lack of coordination from city agencies, including Department of Buildings, Housing Preservation and Human Resources received a couple of calls from Deputy Mayor Dennis Walcott. Like Speaker Quinn, these were not followed up. Nor did staff to Deputy Mayor Dan Doctoroff, regarding the Pastor's request for a meeting to discuss, in particular, the fact [that] five fires had occurred previously. Still, now, the illegal construction has left all the tenants with blackouts due to faulty wiring, an inadequate electrical supply, insufficient ventilation in the three public bathrooms, a broken intercom, broken unfinished stairs and unpainted, filthy hallways, along with vermin and roaches.
There were 5 or 6 people playing paint ball in the north end of Basin 3. I could hear machine gun-like noise and splats from pretty far away. As expected, they were trashing the place. I called 311 to report the incident, which the operator referred to as "Criminal Mischief". I call it trespassing and vandalism of city property. Within about 20 minutes an unmarked police van with 4 officers arrived. They were quickly followed by a patrol car with 2 officers. I pointed them to the area of the basin near the pumphouse next to the Jackie Robinson. I was a distance away and watched as they disappeared around the corner. A few minutes later they all emerged, but without any of the guys with the paintguns. As I walked towards them I heard the sound of the paintball guns starting up again.
Advisers have said Mr. Bloomberg, a billionaire many times over, might invest as much as $1 billion of his own fortune (he spent about $160 million on his two mayoral races) on a presidential campaign.
The V line began running on Dec. 17, 2001, from Forest Hills, Queens to Second Avenue, Manhattan to relieve the crowded E and F lines. But plenty of riders are content to keep cramming into the E and F trains, and the V remains the emptiest train -- at 49 percent capacity -- during peak hours in the transit system. The E, meanwhile, is still bursting with riders during those hours.
Predictions about the future were a staple of New York journalism in the early 20th century. Newspapers, including this one, frequently solicited prominent citizens for their thoughts on the future of the world, of America and, most urgent, of New York.
It's interesting that Tommy Huang is still allowed to have his architect submit self-certified plans to the Buildings Department, especially considering that this particular building at 57-39 Mazeau Street was shut down by DOB for violation of the zoning code as well as for building contrary to approved plans. But, this time they have the zoning correct. R4-1 allows for no more than 2 units.
However, what's up with this? There appear to be 2 1/2 units when you add up the units column, and 12 habit rooms? Also, there is only a garage listed at ground level, so why are there also habit rooms listed for that floor? How does 1/2 a dwelling on the 2nd floor have as many habit rooms as the full unit on the 3rd floor? Is the Huang clan trying to pull another fast one and has DOB fallen for it? Or is someone at city hall in their back pocket?
Why did the NY Post print these 2 articles which read like city hall press releases without any kind of analysis?
When he finally gave in to a nephew’s entreaties to move on, and responded to one of the notes he often got from circling real estate agents, it was important to him to sell to a family and not a developer. He was gratified to have found the Deanses, who clearly had “no intention of doing anything but moving into the place,” he said.
Elected officials at the city and federal level called on federal immigration officials last week to halt their audit of Long Island City's Fresh Direct following a mass walkout of nearly 100 warehouse workers earlier this month.
Once the plan was discovered by local residents, then and only then and with great reluctance did St. John's discuss the Henley Road dorm by revealing the fact that they entered into a 10-year lease with the builders of the facility. When asked about the lack of disclosure to the community, St. John's President Father Donald Harrington, by his own admission, wrote in a letter to my office that, "any earlier dialogue would have been premature, speculative and fiscally irresponsible".
Louis Armstrong's marble, gold and mirrored john is considered to be one of America's Best Bathrooms.
Elected officials representing western Queens at the federal, state and city level sent a letter to Mayor Michael Bloomberg last week in which they said they were frustrated with the slow progress of two projects that would renovate Queens Plaza in Long Island City.
“The lake region is actually gorgeous. If you’ve ever been to Lake Laconia? It really is quite beautiful.”
A late-night fire ripped through a historic church in Queens.
MAYOR: TOP AIDE DOESN'T LOOK NEWISH
Formed a few weeks ago on the social networking site Facebook, the Save Astoria group urges members - about 150 as of late Thursday - to prevent the hipsters from turning churches and cafes into "wasteful art exhibits."
Providing temporary accommodations to tourists instead of to people who want to make the neighborhood their home. Great way to give back to your community. And interesting that this guy has not one, but two apartments to rent out as hotel rooms.
Astoria: $55 / 1br - Visiting NY and Need a place to stay
Flushing: $50 / 1br - 1-bed basement apt. w/ seperate entrance in a house- Available Dec 29
It's not the medieval architectural flourishes of One Bank Street or the wide, checkered hallways that inspire such loyalty, although they are lovely. It's not even the rent—most tenants being kicked out are paying market rate and could probably find similarly priced apartments nearby. It's something much less tangible that has inspired Wilking and a handful of others to organize against their landlord: that some residents can rattle off each other's phone numbers from memory; that they count on one another to cat-sit and water plants; that younger residents check in on their elderly neighbors. It's a building with a romantic history that has been passed down through a community of people formed almost by accident, an urban family conveniently living under the same roof.
New York street photographers and indie filmmakers say their First Amendment rights are still at risk under newly revised regulations put forth by the Mayor's Office of Film, Theater and Broadcasting (MOFTB). Following a summer- long outcry from artists and activists over the first draft of rules published on May 25—which largely prohibited shooting in the city without a permit and $1 million insurance policy—the city redrew its guidelines and released a friendlier version on October 30. But the battle is far from over.
In a decision made public yesterday, Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Marcy Friedman chided Sean Connery and his family for their "blunderbuss" court attacks on eye doctor Burton Sultan and his family, but fined Sultan $1,000 for repeatedly filing lawsuits on claims he's already lost.
How 'Bout That Growing New York Population
It was around 1900 that 78th Street from Fifth Avenue to Madison began to make the transition from rows of brownstones to individualized town houses.
A permanent concrete ramp instead of a removable metal one. Genius! Also appears to be the same owner with the work done around the same time. DOB certainly has him quaking in his boots.
Brownstoner reports that three bills introduced by Brooklyn councilmembers are aiming to end curb cuts via self-certification:
Eleven years ago, the Queens Library system, the largest in the nation by circulation, hired a professional enforcer to collect the 25-cents-a-day late fines as well as missing library materials from books to DVDs to rare musical scores.
The Purchase Building, built with federal Work Projects Administration funds in 1936, had been used as a temporary headquarters for the Office of Emergency Management following 9/11, when its Manhattan office was destroyed.
Isvett Verde, a 28-year-old NYU student, boarded a “very crowded” Manhattan-bound E train last week at 23 Street/Ely Avenue when she felt “a rather strange sensation” in her “nether regions.”