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The 49th Street Theatre (later renamed Cinema 49) was a Broadway theater at 235 West 49th Street in the Theater District of Manhattan in New York City.The 750-seat neo-Renaissance style theater was designed by the architect Herbert J. Krapp for the Shubert Organization. [1]
Privately owned public spaces (POPS) in New York City were introduced in the 1961 Zoning Resolution. The city offers zoning concessions to commercial and residential developers in exchange for a variety of spaces accessible and usable for the public. There are over 590 POPS at over 380 buildings in New York City and are found principally in Manhattan. Spaces range from extended sidewalks to ...
St. Malachy Roman Catholic Church is a parish church of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York, located in Manhattan on West 49th Street, between Broadway and Eighth Avenue. The parish has served the theatre community in a special way since 1920, and its parishioners have included many actors, such as Bob Hope and Gregory Peck. [3]
The Eugene O'Neill Theatre is on 230 West 49th Street, on the south sidewalk between Eighth Avenue and Broadway, in the Midtown Manhattan neighborhood of New York City. [2] [3] The rectangular land lot covers 9,547 square feet (886.9 m 2), with a frontage of 95 feet (29 m) on 49th Street and a depth of 100 feet (30 m).
Tower 49 is an office skyscraper in the Midtown Manhattan neighborhood of New York City. The lot has frontage on both 48th and 49th Streets between Fifth Avenue and Madison Avenue . [ 2 ] The street frontages were offset by about the width of an NYC brownstone lot on both sides.
The interior in 1942. Belmont Plaza Hotel was a hotel in New York City at 49th Street and 541-555 [1] Lexington Avenue, across the street from the Waldorf Astoria. [2]It was purchased by real estate developer and hotelier Alfred Kaskel in the fall of 1945.
The new facility is located at 130-30 28th Avenue, was constructed at a cost of $950 million, and has three buildings with a combined 730,000 square feet of space. [2] It is not easily accessible by public transit; the closest New York City Subway station, Flushing–Main Street, is more than one mile away. [3]
Henry Street Settlement – Lower East Side, Manhattan; founded in 1893 by Lillian Wald; Third Street Settlement – 235 E 11th Street, now called Third Street Music School Settlement; founded in 1894 by Emilie Wagner; Lenox Hill Neighborhood House – 331 E 70th Street; founded in 1894 by the Alumnae Association of Hunter College