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.
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 French Renaissance Revival style skyscraper designed by Warren & Wetmore in 1920-22. It was one of the first skyscrapers in this section of Fifth Avenue and one of the earliest buildings to conform to the groundbreaking 1916 Building Zone Resolution.
Report supporting the designation of the Modullightor Building, designed by the prominent architect Paul Rudolph in 1988-93 and built in phases, as a New York City landmark.
The Office of the Manhattan Borough President's report on the application and selection processes for the appointment of community board members for the 2022-24 term and the 2023-2025 term pursuant to New York City Charter section 82(17)(a).
935 St. Nicholas Avenue, an architecturally distinct early 20th-century Neo-Gothic Revival style apartment building in the Washington Heights neighborhood, was the well-established home to jazz trailblazers, Duke Ellington, and
Noble Sissle, each for over 20 years.
The Renaissance Revival-style Hotel Cecil was home to Minton’s Playhouse, the legendary nightclub where the pivotal style “bebop” emerged and flourished in the 1940s, redefining jazz and American music.
A three-story school building built 1849-50 by the Public-School Society of New York City and used by African American students and teachers from 1860 to 1894.