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Garden City station was originally built in 1872 by the Central Railroad of Long Island, which was built by Alexander Turney Stewart to bring visitors to the Garden City Hotel. The original station was a typical one-story Victorian structure with a second story over the front door, and a back "porch" over high platforms. [ 4 ]
Garden City is a village located in Nassau County, on Long Island, in New York, United States.The population was 23,272 at the time of the 2020 census. [2]The Incorporated Village of Garden City is primarily located within the Town of Hempstead, with the exception being a small area at the northern tip of the village located within the Town of North Hempstead.
East Garden City (also known as the Nassau Hub) is a hamlet and former census-designated place (CDP) under Uniondale in the northeast part of the Town of Hempstead, in the central part of Nassau County, on Long Island, in New York, United States, along the Hempstead/North Hempstead town line. The population was 6,208 at the 2010 census, when it ...
In 2004, the Village Board of the Incorporated Village of Garden City voted to dedicate St. Paul's School's 48 acre (194,000 m 2) site as parkland, with then Mayor Barbara Miller voting twice to break the tie of 4 board members in favor and 4 members opposed, on December 16. Removal of its designation as parkland would require the approval of ...
Roosevelt Field is a shopping mall in the East Garden City section of Uniondale, New York. [3] It is the largest shopping mall on Long Island, the second-largest in the state of New York (after Destiny USA), and the eight-largest shopping mall in the United States.
A. T. Stewart Era Buildings is a national historic district located at Garden City in Nassau County, New York.It consists of a thematic group of 50 residential, commercial, religious, and civic structures built as original elements of the planned community of Garden City between 1871 and 1893.
The station was originally opened in 1911 for the sole purpose of serving the book publisher Doubleday, Page & Company, which had moved in 1910 from Manhattan to Garden City, where co-founder and vice-president Walter Hines Page lived. It is named for the publisher's "Country Life Press" that was located across the tracks. [4]
Once construction was complete in 1964, the company relocated from its 102,000-square-foot (9,500 m 2) facility in Richmond Hill, Queens to its state-of-the-art facility located in Garden City, Long Island. [6] Later that year, the Concrete Industry Board awarded it the "conventional honor" of "Concrete Building of the year" on Nov. 16, 1964. [2]