The Melrose Parkside Historic District is a remarkably cohesive and intact group of 38 single-family row houses and two-family duplexes located on Parkside Avenue between Flatbush and Bedford avenues in the Flatbush neighborhood of Brooklyn.
Designed in the Medieval Revival style by William H. Gompert in 1924-25, with Art Deco-style features by his successor Walter C. Martin, this 1931-32 secondary school is one of the most impressive public structures in The Bronx.
The site of the April 21, 1966 “Sip-In” protesting and publicizing anti-gay discrimination in bars and other public places, the Julius’ Bar Building is New York City’s most significant site of pre-Stonewall LGBTQ+-rights activism.
A Renaissance Revival-style row house designed by Axel Hedman in 1908 that has served since 1991 as the headquarters of the Lesbian Herstory Archives, the nation’s oldest and largest collection of lesbian-related
historical material.
Framing 222nd Street between 115th Road and 116th Avenue in southeastern Queens, the Cambria Heights – 222nd Street Historic District is an architectural highlight of its neighborhood, an unusually cohesive, distinctive, and intact collection of 46 houses built in the Storybook style in 1931.
Framing 227th Street between 116th Avenue and Linden Boulevard in southeastern Queens, the Cambria Heights – 227th Street Historic District is an architectural highlight of its neighborhood, an unusually cohesive, distinctive, and intact collection of 50 houses built in the Storybook style in 1931.