MORE TOP STORIES

Policy, Transportation

MTA service alerts are back on Twitter

By Aaron Ginsburg, Fri, May 5, 2023

  • By Aaron Ginsburg
  • , May 5, 2023

Image courtesy of Marc A. Hermann / MTA New York City Transit on Flickr

After suspending the use of Twitter for real-time service alerts just last week, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority has resumed posting on the social media platform. The decision comes after Twitter reversed plans to charge government agencies for using its application programming interface (API), which would have cost the MTA $50,000 per month.

Find out more

Celebrities, Chelsea, Cool Listings

  • By Michelle Cohen
  • , May 5, 2023

Photo courtesy of Will Ellis/COMPASS

Another of comedian and actor Mike Myers’ fabulous homes is for sale. This 5,600-square-foot penthouse adjacent to the High Line at 505 West 19th Street in West Chelsea, asking $20,000,000, has two terraces and five bedrooms, with designer interiors courtesy of Thomas Juul Hansen, the building’s architect. According to the Wall Street Journal, the “Shrek” star purchased the home for $15.35 million in 2017.

Take the penthouse tour

affordable housing, Brooklyn, housing lotteries, Prospect Heights

  • By Aaron Ginsburg
  • , May 5, 2023

All images courtesy of TF Cornerstone

A housing lottery opened this week for 240 middle-income units at 595 Dean Street, the latest building to open at the Prospect Heights mega-development, Pacific Park. The two-tower, mixed-use project has 798 total rentals, 30 percent of which are designated below market rate, and is anchored by roughly 60,000 square feet of public open space. New Yorkers earning 130 percent of the area median income, or between $78,515 annually for a single person and $187,330 for a household of five, can apply for the apartments, which range from $2,290/month studios to $3,360/month two-bedrooms.

Do you qualify?

Brooklyn Heights, Cool Listings

  • By Michelle Cohen
  • , May 4, 2023

Photo credit: Russ Ross Photography

Though this three-bedroom co-op at 167 Clinton Street in the heart of the Brooklyn Heights Historic District might be a standard railroad flat, it’s definitely in the first-class section: The one inconvenience of the room-after-room layout–having to walk through every room to get to the others–has already been remedied with a closet-lined hallway in the bedroom wing. Situated on the suitably grand parlor floor of a mid-1800s townhouse, there’s plenty of space in this charming residence, asking $1,995,000, that spans the length of the main townhouse plus its rear carriage house.

Take the room-by-room tour

City Living, Policy

  • By Aaron Ginsburg
  • , May 4, 2023

Image courtesy of m01229 on Flickr

Containerization, storage of trash in sealed bins rather than in plastic bags, is possible on 89 percent of New York City’s streets with residential properties. A new analysis released by the city’s Department of Sanitation this week found installing collection receptacles across the city is actually feasible, but would require the elimination of roughly 150,000 parking spaces, or 10 percent of all curb space on blocks with residential buildings. As first reported by the New York Times, the city will launch a pilot program in West Harlem this fall that will include the installation of trash containers in parking spots on up to 10 blocks and at more than a dozen schools.

Find out more

Brooklyn, Sunset Park

  • By Aaron Ginsburg
  • , May 4, 2023

What started as a Brooklyn-themed holiday pop-up will now operate year-round. The 1,200-square-foot marketplace Brooklyn Made will open in Sunset Park’s Industry City this month, with over 50 Brooklyn-based vendors selling merchandise, artwork, beauty products, houseware, and more. The shop will open in Industry City’s Innovation Alley on Thursday, May 18.

Details here

Brooklyn, Events, Greenwood

  • By Aaron Ginsburg
  • , May 4, 2023

All photos courtesy of Green-Wood Cemetery

A massive new public art memorial at Brooklyn’s Green-Wood Cemetery honors lives lost during the Covid-19 pandemic. Curated by Naming The Lost Memorials and City Lore, the “The Many Losses from Covid-19” memorial is made up of personalized tributes to the 79,000 New Yorkers lost to the virus, as well as those suffering from long Covid. Created by 20 local community groups, the month-long display will be located alongside the cemetery’s historic wrought-iron fence near the main entrance at Fifth Avenue and 25th Street.

Find out more

Events, hudson yards

  • By Aaron Ginsburg
  • , May 3, 2023

A rendering of Sonic Sphere in The Shed’s 115-foot-tall McCourt space, 2023. Courtesy The Shed.

A 65-foot-tall spherical concert hall will hang suspended inside The Shed in Hudson Yards. Created by avante-garde architects Ed Cooke, Merijn Royaards, and Nicholas Christie, the Sonic Sphere offers concertgoers a truly unique experience with immersive 3-D sound and light explorations of music that redefine the idea of a concert hall. Performances in the sphere will run from June 9 through July 7.

See more here

Policy

  • By Devin Gannon
  • , May 3, 2023

Photo by Avi Werde on Unsplash

The roughly two million New Yorkers who live in rent-stabilized apartments will likely see rents go up by the largest percentage in 10 years. In a preliminary vote on Tuesday, the Rent Guidelines Board, a nine-member panel responsible for adjusting the cost of rent for stabilized apartments, approved increases on one-year leases between 2 and 5 percent and increases on two-year leases between 4 and 7 percent. A vote determining the final increases will take place in June; the board historically has adopted rent hike proposals that fall within the preliminary range.

Details here

Cool Listings, Midtown East

  • By Michelle Cohen
  • , May 3, 2023

Photo courtesy of Brown Harris Stevens

This 6,000-square-foot full-floor residence in the Beekman Regent condominium at 351 East 51st Street, currently asking $6,995,000 (down from $8,500,000 in 2021), may provide an opportunity for auction lovers: The penthouse with city views and five bedrooms is headed for online auction by the British government, with bids starting at $2,000,000. The penthouse has functioned as the British Consul General in New York’s residence, so it’s a given that its flexible floorplan and nearly 10-foot ceilings would add up to the perfect space for lavish parties and regal receptions.

Take a look inside

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