Triangle Trade Tribeca Traffic Island Remains Forlorn, Despite Developer Promises in Exchange for Zoning Variance The Tribeca building now nearing completion on Sixth Avenue, between Franklin and White Streets, was made possible only after the City granted a zoning variance, allowing a larger (and therefore more valuable) structure on the site than would have been...
Lower Manhattan’s Local News The Broadsheet Inc. | 212-912-1106 | editor@ebroadsheet.com| ebroadsheet.com Triangle Trade Tribeca Traffic Island Remains Forlorn, Despite Developer Promises in Exchange for Zoning Variance The Tribeca building now nearing completion on Sixth Avenue, between Franklin and White Streets, was made possible only after the City granted a zoning variance, allowing a larger...
Brewer, Chin, and Community Groups Tell Mayor: See You in Court Borough President and City Council Member to Hold Rally This Morning to Underscore Objections to Planned Development at Two Bridges The four towers proposed by developers (visible on the right) as described by the de Blasio administration as “minor modifications” to nearby (and much...
Lower Manhattan’s Local News The Broadsheet Inc. | 212-912-1106 | editor@ebroadsheet.com| ebroadsheet.com Brewer, Chin, and Community Groups Tell Mayor: See You in Court Borough President and City Council Member to Hold Rally This Morning to Underscore Objections to Planned Development at Two Bridges The four towers proposed by developers (visible on the right) as described...
‘A Thumb in the Eye’ Local Leaders Don’t Want One Broadway to Get Any Bigger One Broadway, at the corner of Battery Place, began life in the 19th century as a redbrick headquarters for a Gilded Age newspaper owner, but was eventually resurfaced with white limestone and repurposed as a prestige showcase for the steamship...
Lower Manhattan’s Local News The Broadsheet Inc. | 212-912-1106 | editor@ebroadsheet.com| ebroadsheet.com ‘A Thumb in the Eye’ Local Leaders Don’t Want One Broadway to Get Any Bigger One Broadway, at the corner of Battery Place, began life in the 19th century as a redbrick headquarters for a Gilded Age newspaper owner, but was eventually resurfaced...