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Delancey Street and the Blue Condominium from Suffolk Street looking west. Delancey Street is one of the main thoroughfares of New York City's Lower East Side in Manhattan, running from the street's western terminus at the Bowery to its eastern end at FDR Drive, connecting to the Williamsburg Bridge and Brooklyn at Clinton Street.
The Delancey Street/Essex Street station is a station complex shared by the BMT Nassau Street Line and the IND Sixth Avenue Lines of the New York City Subway, located at the intersection of Essex and Delancey Streets on the Lower East Side of Manhattan, just west of the Williamsburg Bridge.
The building at 6 Delancey Street was built to be a high-end shoe store and haberdashery just before the devastating Wall Street crash of 1929. It stood vacant until the end of World War II, when it housed a series of shops. Over time the neighborhood declined. [7] In 1998 the building was fully renovated to become The Bowery Ballroom. [8]
The Ratner's located at 111 Second Avenue, run by Abraham Harmatz, surpassed the Delancey Street restaurant in popularity for many years, especially during the late 1960s and early 1970s when the part of the Lower East Side that is above Houston Street gradually became known as the East Village—a hip and creative Mecca
James Delancey's pre-Revolutionary farm east of post road leading from the city survives in the names Delancey Street and Orchard Street. On the modern map of Manhattan, the Delancey farm [ 20 ] is represented in the grid of streets from Division Street north to Houston Street. [ 21 ]
Delancey Street & Essex Street New York, NY 10002 United States: Coordinates: Owned by: City of New York: Operated by: Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company (1908–1923) New York City Department of Plant and Structures (1923–1931) Brooklyn–Manhattan Transit Corporation (1931–1940)
Delancey Street in 2021 Exterior of Essex Street Market, prior to its rebranding and relocation. Essex Market (formerly known as Essex Street Market) is a food market with independent vendors at the intersection of Essex Street and Delancey Street in the Lower East Side of Manhattan, New York City. [1]
The Lowline, formerly known as the Delancey Underground, [1] is a stalled construction project that would have become the world's first underground park in the New York City borough of Manhattan. It is located under the eastbound roadway of Delancey Street on the Lower East Side , in the former Williamsburg Bridge Trolley Terminal adjacent to ...