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Entries from Gothamist tagged with 'batteryparkcity'

February 3, 2008

Earlier this week, the Post reported that "high-profile" Bronx Republican Fred Brown, who is a GOP district leader in the Bronx and votes there, actually lives in Battery Park City in lower Manhattan. Which means he's been voting in the Bronx illegally. Now, the Bronx's DA's office is investigating the matter. Brown, who is also chairman of the National Black Republican Council and would have been a delegate for Rudy Giuliani if had stayed in......

Continue Reading "The Bronx is Up, But a Bronx Pol Lives Down in the Battery"

February 1, 2008

An appeals court ruled that a doctor who had been missing before September 11, 2001 died during the World Trade Center attacks. The family of Dr. Sneha Anne Philip, last seen at Century 21 on September 10, had in courts for years trying to do so. Previously, a court-appointed guardian implied the 31-year-old doctor led a dangerous lifestyle, because she, per the Post, "frequented bars (including several bars that cater to women customers) and spent......

Continue Reading "Missing Since 9/11, Woman Now Declared Dead"

January 22, 2008

Plans to renovate Pier A, the last remaining pier on the lower west side, are staggering forward again. The Victorian-era three-story pier was built immediately after the Brooklyn Bridge, using much of the same equipment, and was once one of the city’s proudest points of entry, boasting visits from boldface names like Amelia Earhart and the Queen of England. Today it’s a dilapidated eyesore that clashes with the rest of the lavishly rehabilitated west......

Continue Reading "Battery Park Pier A To Be Renovated, Officials Say (Again)"

December 5, 2007

After months and months of delays, the BAM Cultural District may be moving forward. The NY Times is reporting that city officials have chosen Harlem-based developer and Brooklyn resident Carlton Brown to create what the Times' Terry Pristin calls the "cultural district's centerpiece." This is the first Brooklyn project for Brown, who developed the Kalahari and 1400 on Fifth in Harlem and the Solaire, the city's first residential green building, in Battery Park City. The......

Continue Reading "Stalled BAM Cultural District Gets Kick Start"

November 27, 2007

Yesterday morning's rain caused a recently installed sewer main to burst, flooding the basement and parking garage of a Battery Park City luxury apartment building. Water levels reached up to 20 feet. Not only were car owners greeted with news that their vehicles were either submerged or floating on top of sewer water, hundreds of tenants at 90 West Street were evacuated. Fire officials explained that, per WNBC, "rain flooded a re-routed sewer pipe,......

Continue Reading "Sewer Main Bust Floods Downtown Parking Garage"

November 5, 2007

It's the not the first time the government has wasted lots of money and it won't be the last, but the Daily News special investigation into former Governor Pataki's never-built Museum of Women is great proof of how bureaucracy sucks. Originally conceived to celebrate the 150th anniversary of the Women's Rights Convention in Seneca, the museum would have been at the south end of Battery Park City. Various grants were directed to the commission (chaired......

Continue Reading "How to Spend $3 Million of Taxpayer Money on Nothing"

October 31, 2007

Today on the Gothamist Newsmap: a pedestrian struck at White Plains Rd. and 219th St. in the Bronx, an animal incident on Rochelle Pl. on Staten Island, and a hate crime at Columbia University in Manhattan. A tour of Jam Master Jay's studio, where the rap impressario was gunned down five years ago. A brief update on the unforgettable case where a man beat the bejeezus out of a grunting and yelping spin class......

Continue Reading "Extra, Extra"

October 16, 2007

Developer Charles J. Urstadt, the man behind the creation of Battery Park City in the 1970s, is eager to duplicate the feat further north up the Hudson by creating an additional 40 to 50 acres of Manhattan real estate. How? Well, by depositing fill dredged from Lower New York Bay. Urstadt estimates that the city could create land for $75 a square foot that could be worth $2,000 to $3,000 a square foot when developed......

Continue Reading "Battery Park City Redux?"

May 17, 2007

Today on the Gothamist Newsmap: Reptiles on 39th Avenue and 111th Street in Queens, a person shot at Boyland and Sumpter in Brooklyn and police are searching the water near Battery Park City because a woman threw a baby carriage into the Hudson; it's unclear if a baby was in it, but dietrich on Flickr has pictures of the search Apparently police are investigating whether the children - including a 22-year-old Parsons grad -......

Continue Reading "Extra, Extra"

April 28, 2007

The U.N. invited Pope Benedict XVI to NYC earlier this year and the pontiff just accepted. U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon extended the invite recently and the pope agreed to an as-yet-unscheduled visit. The previous pope, John Paul II, visited New York twice, in 1979 and again in 1995. His first visit was frenetic in a manner that belied the man's later physical frailty: He headed first to the United Nations, where he met......

Continue Reading "Pope RSVPs to UN Invite"

April 4, 2007

In yet another sign that the state and city government want big business at the redeveloping area near the World Trade Center, the NY Times reports that JPMorgan Chase is "in negotiations...to build a 1.3 million-square foot skyscraper." And not only would thousands of employees move from Midtown (277 Park Ave.; the bank would keep 270 Park), the skyscraper would be at 130 Liberty St. - where the toxic Deutsche Building is being dismantled.Chase wants......

Continue Reading "JP Morgan Chase May Head Near Ground Zero"

December 18, 2006

Yesterday, people headed to to Battery Park City to sign one of the steel beams bound for Freedom Tower. Dina LaFond, whose daughter died on September 11, told NY1, "This is going to be part of the structure that's supporting the building. So those names are going to be forever inscribed in the way the building's actually holding up. It's not just the physics and steel that's holding the building up but people's ideas......

Continue Reading "Steel Beam for Freedom Tower Gets Signed"

December 16, 2006

In another sign that progress is being made at the World Trade Center site, the first of the steel beams to be used in the building of the Freedom Tower will be on display at Battery Park City tomorrow. Starting at 10 a.m. relatives of 9/11 victims and first responders will be able to sign the thirty-ton beam. Between noon and 3 p.m. the public will be allowed to also sign the beam, which......

Continue Reading "Freedom Tower Beams at Battery Park City"

November 29, 2006

The NY State Commission on Healthcare facilities recommended closing nine hospitals in the state in order to save $1.5 billion. Five are in New York City: St. Vincent's Midtown and Cabrini Medical Center in Manhattan; Victory Memorial in Brooklyn; New York Westchester Square Medical in the Bronx; and Pakway Hospital in Queens. In addition to the recommended closures, the panel recommended that some facilities (ten of which are in the city) be merged with other......

Continue Reading "State Recommends Closing Five NYC Hospitals"

October 7, 2006

Sometimes we think deputy mayor Dan Doctoroff is a little nuts. Take for instance his newest brain-child: The New York Harbor District. Whereas most official districts in the city are defined by geographic proximity and commercial interests the Harbor district, which recently formed an advisory board and is seeking a director and consultants to help define it, will include Governors Island, the Statue of LIberty, Ellis Island, parts of the Brooklyn waterfront and Battery......

Continue Reading "NYC Gets A New District: The Harbor District"

September 12, 2006

-- Some amusing news from John Gotti Jr's third trial-- he's been working on a children's book: "On one page, a cute tiger locked in a cage weeps at the site of a steaming cauldron that burns before him." -- Here's a never-before-released video of the WTC attacks taken from a tower in Battery Park City North. But beware: it's very graphic. -- Celebrities and fashionistas commemorated 9-11 the only way they know how:......

Continue Reading "Extra, Extra"

August 8, 2006

Or, as in the amNew York cover story, it's G for "Good Grief," but we think it's also G for "Gosh Darn It" or "Godawful" or "Give Me a Freaking Break." The article lists a litany of the sadness that is the G line: - Only 4 cars - "Only runs its full route after sunset and on weekends" - Lots of track work on the weekends, further screwing up service - Smells like sewageAnd......

Continue Reading "G is For "Get Me Another Way Out of Here""

July 28, 2006

-- Some horrible New Jersey douchebags massacred 50 seagulls on Tuesday night. Let's hope the gulls figure out a way to get even. -- Speaking of massacres, the P.S. 64 facade is being hammered off this weekend. The demolition of St. Brigid's, however, has been stayed by a judge. -- Huzzah: Jesse Oxfeld is no longer sleeping in the gutter! He's now going to be sleeping in the offices of New York Magazine. --......

Continue Reading "Extra, Extra"

May 16, 2006

Today's NY Times article about the current shaping of Hudson River Park and how it was inspired by the failed Westway project. Westway would have meant a landfill extension into the Hudson along the West Side Highway much like Battery Park City (and with its mix of residential and commercial space) - and the highway would have been built underground, as the highway was crumbling. New York Voices has a good site explaining it,......

Continue Reading "Westway Revisited as Hudson River Park Grows"

May 12, 2006

Nearly two inches of rain fell on Central Park during the wee hours this morning. We are getting a break until tomorrow morning as the long tentacle of rain plows up against the ridge to our east and stalls out. The Weather Service is saying drizzle, showers and maybe a thunderstorm are on tap for tomorrow. The Weather Channel says "no way", calling for cloudy skies in the morning and a peak of sun tomorrow......

Continue Reading "Are You Thinking of Hurricanes?"

April 22, 2006

- The Tram is running again. Without passengers, of course. - The Archdiocese has spared 6 schools, but 9 will still close. - And we quote: "Here's one garbage man who's got junk in his trunk." - In March Hillary Clinton "doled out $213,000 to fellow Senate candidates and Democratic parties in key states." - Meanwhile, City Council Speaker Christine Quinn wants a raise. - In other news, the Battery Park City Authority is......

Continue Reading "Extra, Extra"

January 24, 2006

2006_01_joshselig_small.jpg
Josh Selig, Little Airplane Productions...

Continue Reading "Josh Selig, Little Airplane Productions"

January 13, 2006

We enjoyed last Sunday's "The Hunt" column in the NY TImes about Cragslists once again bringing roommates together. And we loved the photograph of one roommate's cat, Belvedere (right). Then we started to realize that we see lots of cats in "The Hunt" - as well as other pets, but mostly cats. A few felines we found Jorge the cat (and his owner James) in Greenpoint, Gabriel the cat (and owner Martha) on the Upper......

Continue Reading "Loving Kitty Cats"

November 3, 2005

I need a few large pieces of plexiglass for a project I'm working on. Don't ask, but I'm talking big. Short of hauling my butt out to some godforsaken suburban Home Depot, do you know of any place in the city where I could get something like this? - Pat, Battery Park City While many people are aware of places such as Restaurant Row or the Garment District, not too many people realize that......

Continue Reading "Just One Word. Plastics."

October 30, 2005

So this had already been kinda mentioned, but in case you were worried what Bloomberg and Dan Doctoroff were going to focus on next now that the West Side Stadium and the Olympics are dead (and assuming Blooms wins the election) the Daily News has the answer for you: Governors Island. Doctoroff has told the News that development proposals for the 172 acre Island, separated from Brooklyn by the buttermilk channel (you learn something new......

Continue Reading "Next Big Development: Governors Island"

October 25, 2005

An oldie but goodie -- Skycraper.org's five year old Transparent NYC map, which lets you overlay all sorts of information on a map of Manhattan Island. After you check that our, explore the Skyscraper site, which has a bunch of other cool NYC webprojects, and lots of information about the Skyscraper Museum in Battery Park City, which is one of many museums you can visit downtown. The current exhibit is the Top Ten Skyscrapers......

Continue Reading "Supercool: Transparent NYC Map"

September 9, 2005

Fashionistas and music snobs descend upon the city over the next week with both CMJ and Fashion Week starting. We'll most likely only be attending the former. Before it begins though, we'll ease into the hectic schedule with a few of the following events...even if we should be resting up for the week ahead. PARADE: Some downtown blocks will play host to The Art Parade this weekend, with artists parading toward Soho on foot and......

Continue Reading "Upcoming"

January 21, 2005

Reader JMAC emailed us this photograph of a sign seen on a Chelsea block. He wonders:First, how could you lose your small green parakeet in the middle of winter?...how exactly could they be sure that the parakeet was "freezing" (was it shivering, or did it have a stuttering chirp, if a chirp it had at all)?...is "claim" really the correct word to use in such a case?...How the feehuck did a small jungle bird actually......

Continue Reading "Do NYC Birds Freeze?"

October 12, 2004

Since mid-September, Broadway between 60th and 168th Streets has been graced with twenty-five works from sculptor Tom Otterness. You may be familiar with the round figures of Otterness's work from the 14th Street A/C/E station, as well as Battery Park City, Park Avenue, and and 42nd Street (above the Hilton). Gothamist loves the idea of sculptures peeking out in urban places; it's makes our walks so much nicer. Newsday on how it took years to......

Continue Reading "Tom Otterness On Broadway"

October 11, 2004

Columbus Day, which Gothmamist hasn't really celebrated, except for college protests about the holiday (which are pretty matter-of-fact at the alma mater), means that banks and some schools are closed. There's only Express Mail from the US Postal Service, but the branch at 8th Avenue across from Penn Station is open. And more likely than not, you still have work. But for those of you who are able to, the city has some festivities you......

Continue Reading "It's Columbus Day"
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