The de Blasio administration has encouraged New Yorkers to work remotely, shuttered restaurants and bars, and closed the city’s school system to curb the spread of COVID-19. But private construction ...
As the deadline for a new state budget looms in Albany, one formerly stalled piece of legislation—the pied-à-terre tax, to be levied on second homes in NYC valued at $5 million or higher—is gaining ...
Citi Bike has finally installed a station in upper Manhattan—and it only took a global pandemic. The Lyft-owned bike share company has rolled out a new station near Columbia University Irving Medical ...
New York City is seeing a construction boom like never before, and though non-residential construction is driving it, there’s still a lot to be said for the residential sector. According to a report ...
When Snøhetta and the Olayan Group announced last fall that they would revamp the Philip Johnson-designed skyscraper at 550 Madison Avenue, the reaction from architecture buffs and preservation-minded ...
Update: On March 20, Governor Andrew Cuomo announced a 90-day moratorium on evictions for residential and commercial tenants, meaning no one can be evicted in New York state until at least June 20th.
In New York City, the rich are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer. The next big thing that could make income inequality worse? Amazon’s announcement that Long Island City will be the site ...
Renderings courtesy of the New York City Economic Development Cooperation A vision to transform the industrial buildings at Sunset Park’s Bush Terminal into the “center of gravity for local ...
The COVID-19 crisis has upended life in New York in many ways, some bad, and others really bad. Subway ridership has cratered. Broadway has gone dark. Bars and restaurants—at least those that aren’t ...
There’s no way to spin this: After many up-and-down cycles, Staten Island’s Ferris wheel has come to a complete stop. For over a year now, the observation wheel project has been beset by infighting, ...