No Filter Needed: Watch NYC Glow Against an Otherworldly Autumn Sunset
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Carter Uncut brings New York City’s development news under the critical eye of resident architecture critic Carter B. Horsley. This week Carter kicks off a nine-part series, “Skyline Wars,” which will examine the explosive and unprecedented supertall phenomenon that is transforming the city’s silhouette. To start, Carter zooms in on the biggest developments shaping the southern corridor of Central Park.
Luxury real estate for cat ladies: this $23 million Soho loft has a secret cat tunnel that leads from the kitchen to a litter box in the pantry. [WSJ] Tips for hosting Thanksgiving in a tiny apartment. [Curbed] 10 tips for renovating an old house. [Brownstoner] It’s not the $500,000/month suite at the Pierre Hotel, […]
Pioneer Works via the Lit Up Show
Brookmill Farm in Lambertville via C.C. Chapman/Flickr
Google Streetview of buildings that previously stood at the site (L); Rendering of the new building via Goldstein Hill & West Architects (R)
Our series “New York in the ’60s” is a memoir by a longtime New Yorker who moved to the city after college in 1960. Each installment will take us through her journey during a pivotal decade. From $90/month apartments to working in the real “Mad Men” world, we’ll explore the city through the eyes of a spunky, driven female. In our first installment, we went house hunting with the girl on the Upper East Side, and in the second, we visited her first apartment and met her bartender boyfriend. Now, we hear about her career at an advertising magazine… looking in on the Donald Drapers of the time.