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News articles in Greenwich Village

Latest 50 news articles in Greenwich Village

  • Morton and Washington 203,412-SF Boutique Office Up for Grabs

    She did say, however, that this particular property is well leased and is of a larger size than a number of other buildings in the area. The building was constructed in 1911, was gut renovated in 1999/2000, and is situated on the northeast corner of Morton and Washington streets.

    Published by GlobeSt on September 7, 2008.

  • 95 Morton St. 203,412-SF Boutique Office Up for Grabs

    As GlobeSt.com previously reported, Lincoln purchased 95 Morton St. in January 2004 from joint sellers, Brack Capital Real Estate and Steller Management, for $68 million.

    Published by GlobeSt on September 7, 2008.

  • Hudson River Park On TriBeCa Waterfront, New Ways to Play, Watch, or Just Stroll

    A nine-block section of Hudson River Park, skirting TriBeCa from Laight Street to King Street, opened to the public on Wednesday after a $16.3 million reconstruction.

    Published by New York Times on July 24, 2008.

  • 837 Washington Street Disgraced GOP leader sells Meatpacking parcel

    The seller of 837 Washington Street, James Ortenzio, was the chairman of the Manhattan Republican Party in 2004 when the real estate partnership Fisher Brothers paid him $100,000 for consulting services. Ortenzio did not report the payment, as he was obligated to do.

    Published by The Real Deal on July 24, 2008.

  • Hudson River Park $16M Tribeca Section Of Hudson River Park Opens

    The Hudson River Park is 550 acres of waterfront park that will stretch five miles from Battery Park to 59th Street when completed.

    Published by WNBC on July 23, 2008.

  • Greenwich Village $16M Tribeca Section Of Hudson River Park Opens

    Different designers were selected by the trust to match the distinctive looks and personalities of the neighborhoods of Clinton, Midtown, Chelsea, Greenwich Village, Tribeca, and Battery Park City through which the park extends.The Hudson River Park Trust hopes to have 80 percent of the park construction completed by the end of 2009.

    Published by WNBC on July 23, 2008.

  • 50 West 9th Street Amy Sedaris Stays In West Village, Buys $1.3 M. Co-Op

    Ms. Sedaris has paid $1.3 million for a one-bedroom co-op at 50 West 9th Street, city records show. Corcoran listed the 9,000-square-foot apartment in a pre-war brownstone off Fifth Avenue, calling it a “fabulous one-of-a-kind apartment full of original detail and pre-war charm.”

    Published by The New York Observer on July 23, 2008.

  • 50 Carmine St. Kitchen Dish: Ammos Spawns a New Market, and More

    LUNCHTIME GOAT Cabrito (50 Carmine St., between Bedford and Bleecker streets, 212-929-5050) is open for lunch, Monday through Friday, from noon to 4 p.m.

    Published by New York Sun on July 23, 2008.

  • Greenwich Village Artie Traum, 65, Stalwart of ’60s Folk Music Scene, Is Dead

    Artie Traum, a guitarist, songwriter and producer who helped carry the spirit of the 1960s Greenwich Village folk scene to Woodstock, N.Y., died on Sunday. He was 65 and lived in Bearsville, N.Y., near Woodstock.

    Published by New York Times on July 22, 2008.

  • Varick and Houston Lady Bunny To Save Kentucky Fried Chickens

    The nightlife Queen appears on a billboard at the intersection of Varick and Houston streets showing Ms. Bunny holding a bucket of KFC with the printed lettering, "Sometimes Big Bright Packages Contain Dirty Little Secrets."

    Published by The New York Observer on July 22, 2008.

  • Blue Hill Can Yogurt Lose Its Yuck?

    Her product is a big hit at the Union Square Greenmarket, where customers load up on $12 quarts at the height of yogurt season (March: who knew?). “People get addicted to it,” she said. Local restaurants also source from Ms. Weinberg, including such farm-to-table institutions as Blue Hill and Mas.

    Published by The New York Observer on July 22, 2008.

  • West Village Oh Ciccone! Chance Collision With Madonna's Not-So-Buff Bro

    To its surprise, the Transom ran into designer Christopher Ciccone—SMACK!—outside the Rouge Wine Bar at Paris Commune in the West Village.

    Published by The New York Observer on July 22, 2008.

  • New York University Subway Delays Rise, and the No. 4 Line Is Slowest

    “It’s getting slower and slower,” said Brian O’Connell, an undergraduate student at New York University who takes the No. 4 to his job as an intern with the Brooklyn district attorney’s office. “One day we stopped at Bowling Green, they told us there was a power outage, we waited 30 minutes and then they said we’re not going anywhere.

    Published by New York Times on July 22, 2008.

  • Greenwich and Charles VILLAGE VICTIM TELLS KIDDIE THUG TO GET LOST

    The boy, whose identity The Post is withholding because of his age, first brandished his blade at a couple, both 27, who were strolling near Greenwich and Charles streets at 11:25 p.m.

    Published by New York Post on July 22, 2008.

  • 397 West 12th Street Tech Genius and Woody Allen Foe Build 10-Story, Five-Unit Hudson Parthenon

    But when they spent $16 million on the massive site at 397 West 12th Street last April, partnering with the architect and developer Cary Tamarkin, Mr. Tamarkin had already been working on it for years: After he agreed to buy the property and another seven blocks up, the seller tried to make a separate deal with someone else for more money.

    Published by The New York Observer on July 22, 2008.

  • Pier 40 PLANNERS FLOAT NEW PIER IDEA

    With Cirque du Soleil out of the picture at Pier 40, a team of developers has unveiled a $430 million proposal to build athletic fields, rooftop gyms, swimming pools, three public high schools and a hall for corporate parties and other events on top of the massive pier.

    Published by New York Post on July 22, 2008.

  • Meatpacking District Nigel Barker, Baby Seal Rescuer

    Did you know that the former model grew up on a farm with pigs and cows and chickens? Neither did we! Read on for more as the chiseled-faced photographer tells us why the baby seal hunt was too intense for fellow brit Paul McCartney, his Meatpacking District studio, and his membership at Soho House.

    Published by The New York Observer on July 21, 2008.

  • Sheridan Square Mystery chef leaves his mark in Sheridan Square

    He went to Seventh Ave. South and took his foie gras with him. It's a little like Eloise moving to the Chelsea Hotel. But that's too harsh. Sheridan Square is a better restaurant than its vapid version of foie gras ravioli - the descendant of that Russian Tea Room standby. I miss those pelmeni.

    Published by New York Daily News on July 21, 2008.

  • Greenwich Village CRIME SURGE HITS WEALTHY APPLE NABES

    Greenwich Village and the Upper East and West sides are among the neighborhoods hardest hit, bucking what city officials said is an overall drop of 8.9 percent citywide.

    Published by New York Post on July 21, 2008.

  • Soho House Nigel Barker, Baby Seal Rescuer

    Did you know that the former model grew up on a farm with pigs and cows and chickens? Neither did we! Read on for more as the chiseled-faced photographer tells us why the baby seal hunt was too intense for fellow brit Paul McCartney, his Meatpacking District studio, and his membership at Soho House.

    Published by The New York Observer on July 21, 2008.

  • Greenwich Village First-ever Mexican film fest in N.Y. says 'Hola'

    Presented as part of the larger New York International Latino Film Festival, the Hola Mexico Film Festival runs from July 23 to July 27 at the Quad Cinema in Greenwich Village.

    Published by New York Daily News on July 21, 2008.

  • Judith C. White Senior Center AUDIT RIPS SQUALOR AT CITY-FUNDED SENIOR CENTERS

    They noted that seven centers had water faucets that were not functioning properly, and three centers had bathrooms without toilet paper. In the kitchens, stoves were described as "filthy" at the Judith White center in Manhattan and at the Borinquen facility in Brooklyn.

    Published by New York Post on July 18, 2008.

  • Judith C. White Senior Center Report Finds Hazardous Conditions at Senior Centers

    ... pipes protruding from the floor at the Judith C. White Senior Center in the West Village; damaged asbestos-pipe insulation at the Kennedy/Central Harlem Senior Center; and exposed wiring at the Wayside Boulevard Senior Center in East New York, Brooklyn. They were among 20 selected centers that were visited from Oct. 3 to Feb. 15.

    Published by New York Times on July 17, 2008.

  • O'Toole Building St. Vincent's Weighs In: Support For New Hospital 'Universal'

    St. Vincent’s public affairs office gave us a call about our post on the Landmarks Preservation Commission’s meeting Tuesday on the hospital’s hardship application to demolish the O’Toole building and construct a new, “state-of-the-art” medical facility in its place.

    Published by The New York Observer on July 17, 2008.

  • St. Vincent’s Hospital Actors Speak Against Plan to Redevelop St. Vincent’s

    The actors Susan Sarandon and Tim Robbins did not have kudos in mind for St. Vincent’s Hospital Manhattan during a public hearing on whether the hospital should be allowed to build a medical tower and condominium.

    Published by New York Times on July 16, 2008.

  • Cabrito Eating Kids at Cabrito

    Thus it was with puerile excitement that I approached the new cantina called Cabrito, on Carmine Street in the West Village. A pink goat dangling over the doorway strikes a ribald note.

    Published by Village Voice on July 16, 2008.

  • Greenwich Village Sarandon, Robbins oppose NYC hospital plans

    Actors Susan Sarandon and Tim Robbins have said they oppose a huge hospital development in Manhattan's historic Greenwich Village.

    Published by amNY.com on July 16, 2008.

  • Scarpetta Scott Conant's Scarpetta: A Memorable Space, a Meal Less So

    Scarpetta is the latest upscale Italian restaurant by chef Scott Conant, known for simple, luxurious cooking at L'Impero and Alto.

    Published by New York Sun on July 16, 2008.

  • Village Idiot Scott Conant's Scarpetta: A Memorable Space, a Meal Less So

    he last time I went to the Village Idiot, I splurged: $6 for a pitcher of beer and $1 to cue up Willie Nelson on the jukebox.

    Published by New York Sun on July 16, 2008.

  • Greenwich Village Actors Sarandon, Robbins oppose hospital plans

    Actors Susan Sarandon and Tim Robbins have said they oppose a huge hospital development in Manhattan's historic Greenwich Village.

    Published by New York Daily News on July 16, 2008.

  • O'Toole Building Local Elected Officials Endorse New Hospital Plan

    The City Council speaker, Christine Quinn; the president of Manhattan, Scott Stringer; state Senator Thomas Duane, and Rep. Jerrold Nadler all officially endorsed plans for a new 299-foot tall hospital that would require the demolition of the O'Toole Building at 12th Street and Seventh Avenue.

    Published by New York Sun on July 16, 2008.

  • O'Toole building Electeds Back Demise of O'Toole Building To Make Way For Hospital

    However, based on conversations we had with a random sampling of hospital workers, it seems the bulk of the St. Vincent's staff who actually support the hospital's proposal to demolish the O'Toole building and construct a towering, new facility in its place are the ones who work in it.

    Published by The New York Observer on July 15, 2008.

  • SoHo NYC's 'Project Runway' stars

    "['Project Runway'] was the most arduous thing, mentally and physically," says Jerry Tam, 32, who studied at Parsons and the Fashion Institute of Technology and whose own line, Form, is influenced by New York's architecture - not to mention the beautiful women he spots on a daily basis in SoHo, where his studio is located.

    Published by New York Daily News on July 15, 2008.

  • 12th Street and Seventh Avenue Electeds Back Demise of O'Toole Building To Make Way For Hospital

    A host of elected officials today--City Council Speaker Christine Quinn, Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer, Senator Thomas K. Duane, and Congressman Jerrold Nadler--gave their blessings to a demolition of the O'Toole building at 12th Street and Seventh Avenue in order to make way for a new St. Vincent's hospital in its place, should the city's Landmarks Preservation Commission find the hospital faces sufficient "hardship."

    Published by The New York Observer on July 15, 2008.

  • Soho Footloose Forever!

    In 1989, the city’s tightening of zoning regs made the rule even more restrictive, as formerly dance-friendly neighborhoods, including the rapidly gentrifying areas of Soho and Tribeca, became more residential and effectively jig-free. At least for new operators.

    Published by The New York Observer on July 15, 2008.

  • Eighth Avenue and 13th Street A Kind of New Shortage at the Pump: Not of Gas, but of 4s

    That’s why Vishal Nair, who runs the Lukoil station at Eighth Avenue and 13th Street in Greenwich Village, took another plastic number last week, turned it over and scribbled “4” on it with a black magic marker. The result was an obviously homemade “$4.47,” but it would have to do until he received the extra 4s he ordered months ago.

    Published by New York Times on July 15, 2008.

  • Hudson River Park Hudson River Park Trust Seeks RFP for Pier 57

    Since construction of the five-mile Hudson River Park began in 1999, roughly $350 million in capital funds from the state and New York City and the federal government have been used to build 10 new piers and about 2.5 miles of upland park area.

    Published by GlobeSt on July 15, 2008.

  • Washington Square Park Actors Chime In on St. Vincent's New Plan

    But in a twist rare for a landmarks hearing, the hospital’s president, Henry J. Amoroso, led a boisterous demonstration of 100 health care workers and hospital employees across the street in Washington Square Park. As he led them in a chant of “Let St. Vincent’s Build,” many carried signs saying “We Deserve A World-Class Hospital.”

    Published by New York Times on July 15, 2008.

  • West Village An Iceman Revival

    This month, hosts in Manhattan’s party districts can send a text message to an ice truck sponsored by the company that markets Baileys Irish Cream, Smirnoff, and Captain Morgan to have ice delivered to their door (the truck will cover the East Village on July 19 and the West Village on July 26).

    Published by New York Times on July 15, 2008.

  • Saint Vincent Catholic Medical Centers Elected officials support Saint Vincent plan

    Several crucial elected officials gave their support Tuesday to Saint Vincent Catholic Medical Centers’ plan to tear down the O’Toole Building to make way for an $835 million, 21-story hospital tower.

    Published by Crain's New York Business on July 15, 2008.

  • Jewish Enrichment Center, Program Aims To Keep Alumni Connected After Birthright Israel

    The program is based on West 13th Street in Greenwich Village at the Jewish Enrichment Center, a 3,000-square-foot space featuring a coffee bar, Internet access, a pull-down movie screen, and, on a recent visit, artwork that was part of a recent show.

    Published by New York Sun on July 15, 2008.

  • West Village Residential: Volume Dips as Prices Tick Upward

    The West Village’s vacancy rate of 0.89% is the lowest of any Manhattan neighborhood; the highest is in Murray Hill at 1.5%.

    Published by GlobeSt on July 14, 2008.

  • 40 Washington Square Events for Tuesday, July 15, 2008

    1 p.m. Landmarks Preservation Commission holds public hearing on St. Vincent's proposal for a new hospital and luxury apartment tower in Greenwich Village; NYU Law School, 40 Washington Square.

    Published by The New York Observer on July 14, 2008.

  • SoHo Black Carpet Rolled Out For 'Dark Knight' Premiere

    Ledger completed his role shortly before dying in January of an accidental prescription drug overdose. He was found on the floor of his fourth story loft in SoHo.

    Published by CBS News (Channel 2) on July 14, 2008.

  • West Village Led Astray by Diabolical Subway Notices

    Cryptic notes like these and the added hours of commuting is why I bought a Scooter and stopped renewing my Metrocard. Spending 2 am through 4:30 am trying to get from the West Village to Crown Heights just wasn’t worth it anymore, especially when one could never figure out where one was supposed to go.

    Published by New York Times on July 14, 2008.

  • Le Gigot Bastille's Back! Gourmands Reclaim July 14 Five Years After 'Freedom Fries'

    Zagat has a list of some of tonight's culinary-themed festivities, including a DJ, specialty cocktails, and complimentary amuse-bouches at the bar of Alain Ducasse's new bistro Benoit; and the week-long pre-fix menu featuring escargot, duck confit, and crème brûlée at West Village Eatery Le Gigot.

    Published by The New York Observer on July 14, 2008.

  • 14th St. and Ninth Ave. City to make 2 Broadway lanes bikes, walkers only for 7 blocks

    Similar transformations of blacktop to plazas, walkways and bikeways have been completed across the city, including: Gansevoort St. in the Meatpacking District; 14th St. and Ninth Ave.; Pearl St. in DUMBO, Brooklyn, and Grand Army Plaza, also in Brooklyn. The Department of Transportation also is planning to ban cars from a section of 34th St. to create a public plaza and bus-only lanes.

    Published by New York Daily News on July 11, 2008.

  • Hudson River Park Design Proposals Sought For NYC Pier

    The entity overseeing the design and construction of the 5-mile Hudson River Park in New York City is seeking design proposals for one of the last piers still available for development.

    Published by CBS News (Channel 2) on July 11, 2008.

  • SoHo Fifth Ave. shopping not affected by downturn

    "It's starting to look like lower Broadway in SoHo, with a touch of fashion and electronics, and the panache of the international," said broker Faith Hope Consolo of Prudential Douglas Elliman.

    Published by New York Daily News on July 11, 2008.

  • Friends of the High Line Public Lives: Two Friends, and the Dream of a Lofty Park Realized

    The High Line can thank Robert Hammond and Josh David, co-founders of Friends of the High Line, for rescuing it from obsolescence on a shared, but definitely unplanned, personal whim.

    Published by New York Times on July 11, 2008.