As required by New York City Administrative Code, Title 25, Section 318, report containing the June 2024 Staff Level Reports of the Landmarks Preservation Commission
The stunning reception room and banking hall for the Irving Trust and Bank Company, this unusual and elaborately tiled space, completed
in 1931, represents the work of two masters: architect Ralph Walker and muralist Hildreth Meière.
Historic district comprised of neo-Grec style row houses along Willoughby Avenue and Hart Street between Norstrand and Marcy avenues in the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood of Brooklyn
The Frederick Douglass Memorial Park is the only extant, non-sectarian cemetery in New York City that was founded by and for African Americans at a time when discrimination and segregation excluded them from other cemeteries.
Designed by McKenzie, Voorhees & Gmelin for the Brooklyn Edison Company and built between 1922-1926, this highly visible Renaissance Revival style building is a notable landmark in the civic and commercial center of Brooklyn.
As required by New York City Administrative Code, Title 25, Section 318, report containing the May 2024 Staff Level Reports of the Landmarks Preservation Commission
A rare example of a full-height, skylit atrium in a late-19th century tall office building, featuring eight levels of historic galleries with ornate ironwork and arched doors and windows.
A report on the agency's efforts during the previous quarter to implement the plan adopted pursuant to paragraph 19 (annual plan) of Section 815(a), including details of agency's efforts to implement equal employment practices, including statistical information regarding total employment, including provisional, seasonal, per-diem and part-time employees, new hiring and promotions in a manner which facilitates understanding of an agency's efforts to provide fair and effective equal opportunity employment for minority group members, women and members of other groups who are employed by, or who seek employment with, city agencies.