Locations in the media 10041
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Water and Broad
It’s A Good Day for Downtown Lunch’ing
Rickshaw Dumpling is selling their new Szechuan dumplings down in Hanover Square, and the Schnitzel & Things Truck has got goat cheese spaetzle (wha!?!?) on Water and Broad. When are these guys back in Midtown again?!
Published by Midtown Lunch on October 22, 2009.
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32 Old Slip
Why Am I About to Defend Chop’t?
Newsstand in 32 Old Slip at Front St (FiDi) has free coffee today, $2 soup, $2.95 sandwiches!Latest comment by Yvo
Published by Midtown Lunch on September 14, 2009.
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32 Old Slip
Midtown Links (The “I Hope You’re Not Tired of Looking at Biryani Cart Porn” Edition
Newsstand in 32 Old Slip at Front St (FiDi) has free coffee today, $2 soup, $2.95 sandwiches!Latest comment by Yvo
Published by Midtown Lunch on September 11, 2009.
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32 Old Slip
Ladies Drink Free
Newsstand in 32 Old Slip at Front St (FiDi) has free coffee today, $2 soup, $2.95 sandwiches!Latest comment by Cosilicious
Published by Midtown Lunch on September 11, 2009.
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32 Old Slip
Downtown Lunch: And We Shall Name Thee… “Frito Lay” Cart
Newsstand in 32 Old Slip at Front St (FiDi) has free coffee today, $2 soup, $2.95 sandwiches!Latest comment by Cosilicious
Published by Midtown Lunch on September 11, 2009.
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55 Water St., Manhattan
DTCC May Split Space Between NYC, NJ
"We don’t think it’s over yet," Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver told the Times. "I believe they’re willing to keep at least 700 [employees] Downtown. We’re trying for more." Silver’s Assembly district includes Lower Manhattan, where the DTCC is headquartered at 55 Water St., Manhattan’s largest office building at 3.8 million square feet.
Published by GlobeSt on September 4, 2009.
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77 Water St.
Citi Q2 Profits Up on One-Time Gain
Additionally, Citigroup plans to dispose of 371,625 square feet of office space at 250 West St., 338,411 square feet at 333 W. 34th St., 270,311 square feet at 787 Lexington Ave., 176,030 square feet at 731 Lexington Ave., 175,076 square feet at Citigroup Center and 94,252 square feet at 77 Water St.
Published by GlobeSt on July 19, 2009.
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Water Street between Fulton Street and Broad Street
NYC Weekend Bridge & Street Closings > July 4 - 10, 2009
Water Street between Fulton Street and Broad Street: This street will be closed Saturday from 11am to 6pm for the Pearl Street Park Association 4th of July Festival as permitted by the Mayor's Street Activity Permit Office (SAPO).
Published by Derivative Works on July 4, 2009.
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Water Street between Fulton and Old Slip
NYC Weekend Bridge and Street Closures - June 13-14
...Street between Ann Street and Fulton Street; Fulton Street between Gold Street and Water Street; Water Street between Fulton and Old Slip; Old Slip between Water Street and South Street. - The east side of Broadway between 73rd...
Published by Derivative Works on June 12, 2009.
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30 Water Street
Dowtown Lunch: Finding New Options at the Dine Around Festival
...get a burger, fries, and soda for $9 or for $12 you get 2 burgers. 30 Water Street (near Broad), 212-425-1000
Published by Midtown Lunch on June 5, 2009.
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100 Old Slip
Parenting: Where To Go 6/3/09
100 Old Slip (South and Water Streets), Manhattan
Published by NY1 on June 3, 2009.
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55 Water Street
Depository Trust Seeks 700K Square Feet
Right now, the Trust is headquartered at the starkly imposing 55 Water Street, the enormous 3.6 million–square–foot tower designed by Emory Roth & Sons, and now owned by the New Water Street Corp.
Published by The New York Observer on March 24, 2009.
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51 Water Street
The Day U.S. Law Enforcement Was Born
The NYC Watch (American) was established at 51 Water Street at sunset, Nov. 25, 1783, under the authority of the Oct. 23, 1779, New York State Act, “to Provide for the Temporary Government of the Southern Parts of the State Whenever the Enemy Shall Abandon or Be Disposed of the Same.”
Published by New York Times on November 25, 2008.
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55 Water St.
CBRE Promotes Gerla, Petriello to EVP
Gerla and his team recently completed leasing more than 1.4 million sf at the 3.8-million-sf 55 Water St., bringing it to 100% occupancy.
Published by GlobeSt on October 29, 2008.
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36 Water Street
For City’s Burritovilles, Adiós or Hasta la Vista?
Eli Penchasov, 25, the owner of Exquisite Creation Diamond and Jewelry, next door to the Burritoville at 36 Water Street, was surprised that it had closed after renovations three weeks ago.
Published by New York Times on September 20, 2008.
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lower Manhattan
SUBWAY BE DAMMED
The MTA plans to introduce similar furniture in lower Manhattan and on the Upper West Side, areas which are highly susceptible to flooding.
Published by New York Post on September 20, 2008.
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lower Manhattan
MTA Tests Subway Grate Benches To Prevent Flooding
Officials say the benches will be installed at 200 places in Queens. They are also looking to install other fixtures to reduce subway flooding in lower Manhattan and the Upper West Side.
Published by CBS News (Channel 2) on September 20, 2008.
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Lower Manhattan
Silicon Alley Pioneer Late to 'Silicon Alley' Burial
Fred Wilson helped pioneer the techie industry in New York City. He was around when some wags birthed the nickname "Silicon Alley" for that stretch of squat, rather undesirable office buildings running down and around Broadway, roughly from the Flatiron District through Lower Manhattan.
Published by The New York Observer on September 18, 2008.
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Lower Manhattan
Watching the Wall Street Meltdown
Mr. Squadron sought to establish an image of himself as one committed to change in Albany, speaking repeatedly during the campaign about the need for the Legislature to operate with more openness. He emphasized that he took no money from corporations or political action committees in his campaign for the 25th district, which includes Lower Manhattan and parts of Brooklyn.
Published by New York Times on September 15, 2008.
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lower Manhattan
Bird's Nest architects design perch for New Yorkers
Architects Jacques Herzog and Pierre de Meuron's $650 million, 57-story condominium featuring dramatic, cantilevered terraces is slated to begin going up in mid-October in the trendy Tribeca district in lower Manhattan.
Published by New York Daily News on September 13, 2008.
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lower Manhattan
Crack the safe and win 100G!
At previous "Crack the Bank Vault" contests at Amalgamated branch openings in Bedford-Stuyvesant and lower Manhattan, a few hundred people tried, but no one entered the right code.
Published by New York Daily News on September 13, 2008.
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Lower Manhattan
The Towers of Memory, Before and After
In the contemporary view, the Woolworth Building still dominates the southern end of City Hall Park. The glass tower to the right of Woolworth is 7 World Trade Center, the first new tower built near ground zero. On the other side of Woolworth is Barclay Tower, one of a growing number of residential projects that attest to Lower Manhattan’s changing character.
Published by New York Times on September 11, 2008.
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Lower Manhattan
A 9/11 Loss Some Can See From Their Window
In Sunset Park, Brooklyn, Marissa Gonzalez, a corporate recruiter and writer, could not adjust. She had designed her whole fourth-floor apartment on 40th Street around the postcard-worthy outline of the Lower Manhattan skyline rising above the slope of Green-Wood Cemetery and the flats of northwest Brooklyn beyond.
Published by New York Times on September 11, 2008.
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lower Manhattan
FAMILIES SPUR AREA COMEBACK
While the overall population in lower Manhattan is skyrocketing, the number of families with children is rising even faster. Last year, 25 percent of area households included kids under 18, up from 19 percent in 2004, a study by the Downtown Alliance found.
Published by New York Post on September 11, 2008.
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Lower Manhattan
DOWNTOWN'S GROWING PAINS
Lower Manhattan is bursting at the seams, with a new study projecting the population will have grown 83 percent since 9/11 - prompting complaints that the city has been slow to meet the demand for schools and services.
Published by New York Post on September 11, 2008.
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Lower Manhattan
Winners and Losers in the Primary
The organization campaigned for Daniel L. Squadron, who defeated State Senator Martin Connor in a district in parts of Brooklyn and Lower Manhattan.
Published by New York Times on September 10, 2008.
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Lower Manhattan
Who You Calling Fastest-Growing Neighborhood in the Nation?
Today, Lower Manhattan is the fastest-growing residential neighborhood in the country, bustling morning, noon and night. But the rebirth of Lower Manhattan will not be complete as long as Ground Zero remains an open wound.
Published by The New York Observer on September 10, 2008.
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Lower Manhattan
Paterson On Bloomberg's WTC Op-Ed: No Public Spats Today
The mayor and the governor in Lower Manhattan this spring.
Published by The New York Observer on September 10, 2008.
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lower Manhattan
Silver weathers challenge in primaries
New York Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver weathered a challenge to his Democratic seat in lower Manhattan in Tuesday's legislative primaries that threw scares into some incumbents who have been in the Legislature for decades.
Published by ABC News (Channel 7) on September 10, 2008.
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Lower Manhattan
NYCLU Sues Over Surveillance Plan
A civil rights group sued the New York Police Department yesterday seeking to learn more about a plan to use license plate readers and a network of 3,000 surveillance cameras to help protect lower Manhattan from terrorist threats.
Published by New York Sun on September 9, 2008.