The Public Design Commission meets once a month. The meeting agendas are posted online three business days in advance of each meeting and published in the City Record. Agendas are also distributed to all City Council members, Community Boards, and City agency liaisons.
The Public Design Commission’s 2020 annual report provides data on the PDC’s review of submissions as required by Local Law 17 of 2017. The report gives an overview of our collaborative interagency initiatives to streamline design review and improve the City’s public spaces for all New Yorkers.
The Public Design Commission meets once a month. The meeting agendas are posted online three business days in advance of each meeting and published in the City Record. Agendas are also distributed to all City Council members, Community Boards, and City agency liaisons.
The Public Design Commission meets once a month. The meeting agendas are posted online three business days in advance of each meeting and published in the City Record. Agendas are also distributed to all City Council members, Community Boards, and City agency liaisons.
The Public Design Commission meets once a month. The meeting agendas are posted online three business days in advance of each meeting and published in the City Record. Agendas are also distributed to all City Council members, Community Boards, and City agency liaisons
The Public Design Commission meets once a month. The meeting agendas are posted online three business days in advance of each meeting and published in the City Record. Agendas are also distributed to all City Council members, Community Boards, and City agency liaisons.
This pocket zine was created by the Public Design Commission for “WE Walk: Streets for Connection,” an annual PARK(ing) Day event held on September 17th, 2020 on West End Avenue and 90th Street in Manhattan. The event was hosted by New York Chapter of the American Society of Landscape Architects.
As part of the NYC Public Design Commission’s Designing New York
series, "Designing New York: Prefabrication in the Public Realm" examines how prefabrication practices can be applied to small-scale urban infrastructure projects to have a large public-realm impact.
The Public Design Commission meets once a month. The meeting agendas are posted online three business days in advance of each meeting and published in the City Record. Agendas are also distributed to all City Council members, Community Boards, and City agency liaisons.
The Public Design Commission meets once a month. The meeting agendas are posted online three business days in advance of each meeting and published in the City Record. Agendas are also distributed to all City Council members, Community Boards, and City agency liaisons.
The Public Design Commission meets once a month. The meeting agendas are posted online three business days in advance of each meeting and published in the City Record. Agendas are also distributed to all City Council members, Community Boards, and City agency liaisons.
The Public Design Commission meets once a month. The meeting agendas are posted online three business days in advance of each meeting and published in the City Record. Agendas are also distributed to all City Council members, Community Boards, and City agency liaisons.
Announced by Mayor de Blasio in June of 2015, an interagency Three-Quarter Housing (TQH) Task Force reviews the use of three-quarter houses in New York City and promotes structural stability, fire safety, and tenant protections. The interagency Task Force includes DOB, FDNY, HPD, HRA and Law Dept.
Announced by Mayor de Blasio in June of 2015, an interagency Three-Quarter Housing (TQH) Task Force reviews the use of three-quarter houses in New York City and promotes structural stability, fire safety, and tenant protections. The interagency Task Force includes DOB, FDNY, HPD, HRA and Law Dept.
This is the Agency Quarterly EEO Report, This Quarterly Report includes a Commitment and Accountability Statement by the Agency Head, A Recognition and Accomplishments Section, A Workforce Review Section, A Diversity, Inclusion and Equity Initiatives Section, and A Recruitment and Training Section.
The CAFR contains information about the assets and liabilities of NYCERS' pension fund. Statistical tables show the composition of NYCERS' membership, which is used by the Actuary to determine the amount that employers must contribute to the Fund each year in order to pay statutory benefits.
Commitment card for volunteers to sign up to join their Neighborhood Organizing Census Committee(NOCC) . NOCC helped provide an organizational structure for local volunteers to do their own direct outreach to their friends, families, and neighbors, with support from NYC Census 2020.
This report is a record of the NYC Mayor's Office of Media and Entertainment's Office of Nightlife's work during its first three years, from 2018 to 2019, and sets forth recommendations regarding nightlife in New York City.
In 2019, the NYC Council passed Local Law 220 (2019), requiring the Office of Nightlife
at the Mayor’s Office of Media and Entertainment to publish a semi-annual report of
Multi-Agency Response to Community Hotspot (M.A.R.C.H.) inspections. M.A.R.C.H. is a multi-agency inspection, led by the NYPD.
Emergency Executive Order 100, regarding ULURP, City Council, BP Election, Procurement, Elective Surgery, Restaurants, Department of Corrections, Senior Citizen Centers, Gyms and Gatherings. March 16, 2020.