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Tag Archives: New York
Stuart Little, Gramercy Park
Here is another sketch by Garth Williams from E.B. White’s Stuart Little. The lovelorn mouse is about to leave the Little residence in search of Margalo, a lady bird who has fled. A pigeon (“the weird pigeon,” my little boy … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture
Tagged Cities, E.B. White, Garth Williams, Gramercy Park, Manhattan, New York, Stuart Little, Urban Sociology
3 Comments
“Shabby little old walkups”?
Today at 7, Books on the Square, 471 Angell St. on Wayland Square, will host a book event for Lost Providence. But you already know that, so what about this: The landscape of New York in fact is filled with … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture, Development, Lost Providence, Uncategorized
Tagged Books on the Square, Development, Helmut Jahn, High-Rise, Jerry Adler, Lost Providence, New York
2 Comments
More on Penn Sta. rebuild
The Gothamist yesterday ran a long article by Jake Offenhartz, “A Dramatic Plan to Rebuild Penn Station & Restore its Lost Grandeur,” that explains the several initiatives involved in the proposal to rebuild Penn Station in its original Beaux Arts … Continue reading
Living beyond the Chrysler
With the new looser height restrictions in Manhattan’s Midtown East, it looks as if people with condos atop new towers soon to be built will be able to look down their noses from the clouds above the crown of the … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture
Tagged Chrysler Building, Development, Froma Harrop, New York, ThisEastSide.com, Zoning
4 Comments
New York then and now
Yesterday I posted a series of film clips shot between 1896 and 1905, and urged readers familiar with the city to use the tools supplied with the video to imagine what those places look like today. Well, a reader, Barry … Continue reading
Oldest footage of New York
This fascinating video, “Oldest footage of New York City ever,” filmed between 1896 and 1905, has been seen on this blog before. I post it again because, first, it is so amazing, and second, it has a new feature my … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture, Old Video
Tagged Library of Congress, Marilyn Monroe, New York, New York History, photography, Video, Yestervid
5 Comments
A Jane Jacobs cornucopia
Here is an excellent review of recent books published by and about Jane Jacobs in the past year, which was the centennial of her birth. “What Jane Jacobs Saw,” by Michael Lewis in the upcoming March issue of First Things, … Continue reading
My explosive TB blog post
My November blog post written for Traditional Building magazine was explosive, to say the least. It is about two buildings that blew up and a third building that bodes well to beautify its neighborhood by not blowing up its context. … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture, Preservation
Tagged Greenwich Village, New York, Preservation, Traditional Building, Upper East Side, Weathermen
1 Comment
900 pages on WTC rebuild
I am remiss in not having been aware, until yesterday, of Columbia University emerita professor Lynne Sagalyn’s 900-page book on the politics and economics of rebuilding the World Trade Center after 9/11. It is called Power at Ground Zero: Politics, … Continue reading
Review: 1 WTC’s biography
The new World Trade Center reflects what was worst about the old WTC towers and their brethren demolished by terrorists on 9/11. The Twin Towers were sterile, inhumane structures that epitomized the crushing brutality of urbanism at its worst in … Continue reading

