The Old Croton Aqueduct Walk is a linear park located on top of a historic water system constructed between 1837 and 1842 to provide water to the city. The walk has been a beloved open space for residents since the 19th century.
These reports include the goals, programs, and initiatives from the FY 2024 DEI-EEO plan and Statistical Summary which serves to facilitate reporting by agency and on aggregate level.
The New York Public Library, Tremont Branch, designed by the prominent architectural firm of Carrère and Hastings, opened in 1905 is an impressively intact Carnegie library that has been a significant part of the community since its construction.
The Bronx Borough President commitment to support and enforce the rights and protections afforded by the New York City EEO Policy, the City and State Human Rights Law, and all other relevant laws, for all employees, applicants for employment, partners, and members of the public service.
Laid out c. 1910 in the Hunts Point neighborhood, Joseph Rodman Drake Park and Enslaved People's Burial Ground is a New York City park containing two colonial-era cemeteries one for the Hunt-Willett-Leggett families and their descendants and the other for the enslaved people who worked for them.
an audit of the Bronx County District Attorney’s Office’s (BXDA’s) compliance with relevant laws, standards, and guidelines regarding the provision of language access services to the non-English Language Preference (NELP) population.
Designed by George Keister and developed by George M. Cohan, this Italian Renaissance Revival-style theater and commercial building featured Broadway acts in its early “Subway Circuit” years before hosting a succession of
clubs that were central to the Bronx’s innovative and influential Latin music