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The 76th Street tunnel proposal resurfaced in 1963, though the location of the tunnel was changed several times thereafter. [4] In 1965, the NYCTA finally decided to build the subway tunnel at 63rd Street. [5] The first proposals to bring LIRR service to a terminal in eastern Midtown Manhattan arose in 1963. [2]: 17 (PDF p.
The area west of 39th Street is covered by 11101, while Sunnyside Gardens is located in 11104, and the area east of 45th Street is inside 11377. [25] The United States Post Office operates the Sunnyside Station at 45-15 44th Street. [26]
Sunnyside of the late 19th and early 20th century was a suburb of houses and mansions. Esselen street was named after Ewald Auguste Esselen, the State Attorney of the South African Republic from 1894 to 1895. Since 2012 the street has been renamed to Robert Sobukwe street.
Sunnyside is a proposed commuter rail station to be served by the Long Island Rail Road and the Metro-North Railroad. Located in the Sunnyside neighborhood of Queens, New York, the station would be located within the City Terminal Zone. The proposed location of the station is at Queens Boulevard and Skillman Avenue. [1] [2]
Sunnyside Gardens is a community within Sunnyside, a neighborhood in the New York City borough of Queens.The area was the first development in the United States patterned after the ideas of the garden city movement initiated in England in the first decades of the twentieth century by Ebenezer Howard and Raymond Unwin, specifically Hampstead Garden Suburb and Letchworth Garden City.
The Sunnyside Sun absorbed the weekly Sunnyside Times in 1962. The paper was acquired by the Oregon-based Eagle Newspapers in 1984. [5] Eagle bought the competing Daily News as well, and merged the two in 1986 to form the Daily Sun News. [13] [14] [15] After the paper's sale to Andy McNab in 2018, the name was changed back to Sunnyside Sun. [16]
Woodside is a neighborhood in the western portion of the borough of Queens in New York City.It is bordered on the south by Maspeth, on the north by Astoria, on the west by Sunnyside, and on the east by Elmhurst, Jackson Heights, and East Elmhurst.
The Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR) completed construction of the yard in 1910. [1]: 93 At that time, Sunnyside was the largest coach yard in the world, occupying 192 acres (0.78 km 2) and containing 25.7 miles (41.4 km) of track.