Report on new full-time and part-time employees, employees promoted, employees terminated, employees leaving the agency, and aggregated data about the employees.
Designation Report by the Landmarks Preservation Commission for the Childs Restaurant (Brooklyn), complete with its history, description, and analysis.
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.
The report for the landmark designation of the (Former) New York and New Jersey Telephone Company Building, located on 81 Willoughby Street (aka 119-127 Lawrence Street), Brooklyn, by the Landmarks Preservation Commission, as well as the designation of Borough of Brooklyn Tax Map Block 148, Lot 46 as its Landmark Site.
This is a desgination report for the (Former) Pepsi-Cola Building Individual Landmark.
This report describes the landmark's significance, and states whether the Landmarks Preservation Commission designates it as a landmark.
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.
The report for the landmark designation of 127 MacDougal Street House, located on 127 MacDougal Street, Manhattan, by the Landmarks Preservation Commission, as well as the designation of Borough of Manhattan Tax Map Block 543, Lot 59, as its Landmark Site.
The report for the landmark designation of 129 MacDougal Street House, located on 129 MacDougal Street, Manhattan, by the Landmarks Preservation Commission, as well as the designation of Borough of Manhattan Tax Map Block 543, Lot 58, as its Landmark Site.
The report for the landmark designation of 131 MacDougal Street House, located on 131 MacDougal Street, Manhattan, by the Landmarks Preservation Commission, as well as the designation of Borough of Manhattan Tax Map Block 543, Lot 57, as its Landmark Site.
200 Madison Avenue First Floor Lobby Interior was designed by Warren & Wetmore and built in 1925-1926, the glittering neoclassical lobby of 200 Madison Avenue contains a richly
embellished through-block arcade and elevator hall.
The report for the landmark designation of 35-34 Bell Boulevard, Queens, by the Landmarks Preservation Commission, as well as the designation of Borough of Queens Tax Map Block 6169, Lot 21, as its Landmark Site.
Designation report for 47 West 28th Street a c.1852 Italianate-style row house which was the site of numerous musicians' and sheet music publishers' offices in the 1890s-1900s and was part of a block known as "Tin Pan Alley."
NYC Landmarks Preservation Commission Designation Report for 486 Greenwich Street House, Borough of Manhattan. This report includes the summary of its history and its description.
Designation report for 49 West 28th Street a c.1852 Italianate-style row house which was the site of numerous musicians' and sheet music publishers' offices in the 1890s-1900s and was part of a block known as "Tin Pan Alley."
Designation report for 51 West 28th Street a c.1852 Italianate-style row house which was the site of numerous musicians' and sheet music publishers' offices in the 1890s-1900s and was part of a block known as "Tin Pan Alley."
Designation report for 53 West 28th Street a c.1852 Italianate-style row house which was the site of numerous musicians' and sheet music publishers' offices in the 1890s-1900s and was part of a block known as "Tin Pan Alley."
Designation report for 55 West 28th Street a c.1852 Italianate-style row house which was the site of numerous musicians' and sheet music publishers' offices in the 1890s-1900s and was part of a block known as "Tin Pan Alley."
On the basis of a careful consideration of the history, the architecture, and other features of this building, the Landmark's Preservation Commission finds that the 56-58 Pine Street
Building has a special character and a special historical and aesthetic interest and value as part of the development, heritage, and cultural characteristics of New York City.
Designation report for 817 Broadway a 14-story store-and-loft building designed in the Renaissance Revival style by George B. Post and constructed in 1895-96. It represents the high-rise commercial development along Broadway in the late 19th century.
Designation report for 826 Broadway (now the Strand Building) an 11-story Renaissance Revival-style store-and-loft building designed by William H. Birkmire in 1902. It represents the commercial development of Broadway at the start of the 20th century.
Designation report for 830 Broadway a Renaissance Revival-style store-and-loft building by Cleverdon & Putzel (1897-98) representative of the large-scale commercial development that transformed Broadway south of Union Square at the end of the 19th century.
Designation report for 832-834 Broadway a 10-story Renaissance Revival store-and-loft building designed in 1896 by Ralph S. Townsend. It is representative of the high-rise commercial development of Broadway, south of Union Square, in the early 20th century.
Designation report for 836 Broadway a six-story cast-iron-fronted store-and-loft building in the neo-Grec style designed in 1876 by Stephen Decatur Hatch. It is an early example of the commercial development along Broadway at the end of the 19th century.
Designation report for 840 Broadway Building, a 12-story Renaissance Revival-style building designed by Robert Maynicke. It is a significant example of the commercial development of Broadway at the end of the 19th century.
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.
On November 16, 2004, the Landmarks Preservation Commission held a public hearing on the proposed designation as a Landmark of the A.I. Namm & Son Department
Store and the proposed designation of the related Landmark Site. The report describes the landmark in detail and issues a decision as to whether or not the building is a
landmark or not.
The Landmarks Preservation Commission designates as a NYC Landmark the AT&T Building ... an icon of the Manhattan skyline. The designation report outlines the history of the building.
Aakawaxung Munahanung (Island Protected from the Wind) Archaeological Site is associated with over 8,000 years of occupation by Indigenous Peoples. It contains the region's best-preserved known cultural complex and archaeological site associated with the Indigenous presence in New York City.