To the editor: Matthew Fenton’s article (BroadsheetDAILY July 11) on the Dickey house has meaning in today’s context: The area took only 50 years to go from a millionaire’s haven to slum. Although the process in retrospect seems almost inevitable given the then laissez-faire attitude to construction, it was also quickly moved forward by the...
A leading housing advocacy organization has completed an exhaustive look at threats to affordability in every community in the five boroughs, and has found that Lower Manhattan ranks among the ten most at-risk neighborhoods, as measured by two key metrics. The Association for Neighborhood and Housing Development (ANHD), an umbrella organization of 100 non-profit affordable...
Hold on! Hold on to the Sun! In the weeks since the summer solstice the northeast has been transformed. A great leafy uprising has spread over the land, drawn to seemingly ever-present sunlight. The green swell has been lifting for months, first in measured increments, now burgeoning. Bare forests have transformed in waves of unfurling...
An unobtrusive Lower Manhattan structure might be the local embodiment of the phrase, “If these walls could talk…” The Robert and Anne Dickey House, located at 67 Greenwich Street (one block south of Rector Street), has been host to a stunning variety of uses since it was completed in 1810, as recently reported by the...
1086 – King Canute IV of Denmark is killed by rebellious peasants. 1212 – The most severe of several early fires of London burns most of the city to the ground. 1806 – The Vellore Mutiny is the first instance of a mutiny by Indian sepoys against the British East India Company. 1821 – The...
Justine Cuccia, co-founder of Democracy for Battery Park City: “For people who live here to have a voice how our community is governed: Sign the bill!” More than 100 residents turned out on Thursday evening for a rally on the Esplanade, called to encourage Governor Andrew Cuomo to sign a bill that recently passed both...