New York City

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This article covers numbered east-west streets in Manhattan, New York City. Major streets have their own linked articles; minor streets are discussed here. The streets do not run exactly east-west, because the grid plan is aligned with the Hudson River rather than with the cardinal directions. "West" is approximately 29 degrees north of true west.

The numbered streets carry crosstown traffic. In general, even-numbered streets are one-way eastbound and odd-numbered streets are one-way west. Several exceptions reverse this. Most wider streets carry two-way traffic, as do a few of the narrow ones.

Streets change from west to east (for instance, East 10th Street to West 10th Street) at Broadway below 8th Street, and at Fifth Avenue from 8th Street and above.

Although the numbered streets begin just north of East Houston Street in the East Village, they generally do not extend west into Greenwich Village, which already had streets when the grid plan was laid out by the Commissioners' Plan of 1811. Streets that do continue farther west change directions before reaching the Hudson River. The grid covers the length of the island from 14th Street north. (13th Street would be the southernmost numbered street to cover the entire width of Manhattan without changing directions, but it diverts northward as it meets 8th Avenue.{{#invoke:Namespace detect|main}}{{#invoke:Namespace detect|main}}[citation needed])

The highest street number in Manhattan is 228th Street, but the numbering continues in the Bronx up to 263rd Street.[1]

Contents

Details [link]

Peretz Square, Houston Street on left; First Street on right

1st Street - 7th Street [link]

East 1st Street begins just north of East Houston Street at Avenue A and continues to Bowery. Peretz Square, a small triangular sliver park where Houston Street, First Street and First Avenue meet marks the spot where the grid takes hold.[2]

The east end of these streets is Avenue D, except for the aforementioned East 1st Street and East 6th Street, which connects to FDR Drive.

The west end of these streets is Bowery and Third Avenue, except for 3rd Street (formerly Amity Place; to Sixth Avenue) and 4th Street (to 13th Street), which extend west and north, respectively, into Greenwich Village. Great Jones Street connects East 3rd to West 3rd.

East 5th Street is cut into three parts. 1st part is from Avenue D and ends on a dead end after Avenue C. Then it goes from Avenue B to Avenue A, and the 3rd part is from 1st Avenue to Cooper Square.

Lengths of streets [link]

Street Start End Length
1st Street Avenue A/E Houston Street Bowery 0.6 kilometres (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 0.3728227153424 | 1--1 }} mi)
2nd Street Avenue D/E Houston Street Bowery 1.3 kilometres (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 0.80778254990853 | 1--1 }} mi)
3rd Street Avenue D Bowery 1.3 kilometres (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 0.80778254990853 | 1--1 }} mi)
4th Street Avenue D W 13th Street 3.1 kilometres (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 1.9262506959357 | 1-0 }} mi)
5th Street Avenue D Cooper Square/3rd Avenue 1 kilometre (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 0.62137119223733 | 1--1 }} mi)
6th Street FDR Drive Cooper Square/3rd Avenue 1.5 kilometres (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 0.932056788356 | 1--1 }} mi)
7th Street Avenue D 3rd Avenue 1.3 kilometres (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 0.80778254990853 | 1--1 }} mi)

8th Street and 9th Street [link]

8th and 9th Streets run parallel to each other, beginning at Avenue D, interrupted by Tompkins Square Park at Avenue B, resuming at Avenue A and continuing to Sixth Avenue. West 8th Street is an important local shopping street. 8th Street between Avenue A and 3rd Avenue is called St Mark's Place, but it is counted in the length below.

M8 bus route operates eastbound on 8th Street and westbound on 9th Street between Avenue A and Sixth Avenue.

Lengths of streets [link]

Street Start End Length
8th Street Avenue D 6th Avenue 2 kilometres (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 1.2427423844747 | 1-0 }} mi)
9th Street Avenue D 6th Avenue 2 kilometres (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 1.2427423844747 | 1-0 }} mi)

10th Street to 13th Street [link]

10th Street ({{#invoke:Coordinates|coord}}{{#coordinates:40.7342580|-74.0029670||||||| | |name= }}) begins at the FDR Drive and Avenue C. West of Sixth Avenue, it turns southward about 40 degrees to join the Greenwich Village street grid and continue to West Street on the Hudson River. Because West 4th Street turns northward at Sixth Avenue, it intersects 10th, 11th and 12th and 13th Streets in the West Village. The M8 bus operates on 10th Street in both directions between Avenue D and Avenue A, and eastbound between West Street and Sixth Avenue. 10th Street has an eastbound bike lane from Sixth Avenue to the East River. In 2009, the two-way section of 10th Street between Avenue A and the East River had bicycle markings and sharrows installed, but it still has no dedicated bike lane. West 10th Street was previously named Amos Street for Richard Amos.[3] The end of West 10th Street toward the Hudson River was once the home of Newgate Prison, New York City's first prison and the United States' second.

13th Street is in three parts. The first is a dead end from Avenue C. The second starts at a dead end, just before Avenue B, and runs to Greenwich Avenue, and the third part is from 8th Avenue to 10th Avenue.

Lengths of streets [link]

Street Start End Length
10th Street FDR Drive West Street 3.4 kilometres (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 2.1126620536069 | 1-0 }} mi)
11th Street Avenue C West Street 2.8 kilometres (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 1.7398393382645 | 1-0 }} mi)
12th Street Avenue C West Street 3.1 kilometres (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 1.9262506959357 | 1-0 }} mi)
13th Street Avenue C dead end 0.3 kilometres (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 0.1864113576712 | 1--1 }} mi)
13th Street dead end (Av B) 10th Avenue 3 kilometres (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 1.864113576712 | 1-0 }} mi)

14th Street [link]

14th Street is a main numbered street in Manhattan. It begins at Avenue C and ends at West Street. Its length is 3.4 km (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 2.1126620536069 | 1-0 }} mi). It has six subway stations:

From Avenue A or Avenue C to West Street there is service M14AD bus.

15th and 16th Streets [link]

15th Street starts at FDR Drive, and 16th Street starts at a dead end half way between FDR Drive and Avenue C. They are both stopped at Avenue C and continue from 1st Avenue to West Street, stopped again at Union Square, and 16th Street also pauses at Stuyvesant Square.

Lengths of streets [link]

Street Start End Length
15th Street FDR Drive Avenue C 0.3 kilometres (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 0.1864113576712 | 1--1 }} mi)
15th Street 1st Avenue West Street 2.4 kilometres (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 1.4912908613696 | 1-0 }} mi)
16th Street Dead end (Av C) Avenue C 0.2 kilometres (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 0.12427423844747 | 1--1 }} mi)
16th Street 1st Avenue West Street 2.9 kilometres (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 1.8019764574883 | 1-0 }} mi)

17th to 19th Streets [link]

Bike parking at 17th Street
33 East 17th Street (NRHP)

17th, 18th and 19th Streets start at 1st Avenue and finish at 11th Avenue.

On 17th Street ({{#invoke:Coordinates|coord}}{{#coordinates:40.735532|N|73.986575|W||||| | |name= }}), traffic runs one way along the street, from east to west excepting the stretch between Broadway and Park Avenue South, where traffic runs in both directions.[4] It forms the northern borders of both Union Square (between Broadway and Park Avenue South) and Stuyvesant Square. Composer Antonín Dvořák's New York home was located at 327 East 17th Street, near Perlman Place. The house was razed by Beth Israel Medical Center after it received approval of a 1991 application to demolish the house and replace it with an AIDS hospice.[5] Time Magazine was started at 141 East 17th Street.[6]

18th Street has a local subway station at the crossing with 7th Avenue, served by the 1 2 trains on the IRT Broadway – Seventh Avenue Line. There used to be an 18th Street station on the IRT Lexington Avenue Line at the crossing with Park Avenue South.

On the part of 19th Street between 10th and 11th Avenues, the travel direction is different. {{#invoke:Namespace detect|main}}{{#invoke:Namespace detect|main}}[clarification needed]

Lengths of streets [link]

Street Start End Length
17th Street 1st Avenue 11th Avenue 2.6 kilometres (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 1.6155650998171 | 1-0 }} mi)
18th Street 1st Avenue 11th Avenue 2.6 kilometres (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 1.6155650998171 | 1-0 }} mi)
19th Street 1st Avenue 11th Avenue 2.6 kilometres (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 1.6155650998171 | 1-0 }} mi)

20th to 22nd Streets [link]

20th Street starts at Avenue C, and 21st and 22nd Streets begin at First Avenue. They all end at Eleventh Avenue. Travel on the last block of the 20th, 21st and 22nd Streets, between Tenth and Eleventh Avenues, is in the opposite direction than it is on the rest of the respective street. 20th Street is very wide from the Avenue C to First Avenue.

Lengths of streets [link]

Street Start End Length
20th Street FDR Drive 11th Avenue 3.1 kilometres (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 1.9262506959357 | 1-0 }} mi)
21st Street 1st Avenue 11th Avenue 2.7 kilometres (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 1.6777022190408 | 1-0 }} mi)
22nd Street 1st Avenue 11th Avenue 2.7 kilometres (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 1.6777022190408 | 1-0 }} mi)

23rd Street [link]

23rd Street is another main numbered street in Manhattan. It begins at FDR Drive and ends at 11th Avenue. Its length is 3.1 km/1.9m. It has two-way travel. On 23rd Street there are five local subway stations:

Additionally, there is the M23 bus, running through the length of 23rd Street.

24th to 26th Streets [link]

24th Street is in two parts. 24th Street starts at First Avenue and it ends at Madison Avenue, because of Madison Square Park. 25th Street, which is in three parts, starts at FDR Drive, is a pedestrian plaza between Third Avenue and Lexington Avenue, and ends at Madison. Then West 24th and 25th Streets continue from 5th Avenue to 11th Avenue (25th) or 12th Avenue (24th).

26th Street is all in one part and after reaching FDR Drive bends and runs parallel to FDR Drive up to 30th Street.

27th Street [link]

Gershwin Hotel on East 27th Street

27th Street is a one-way street runs from Second Avenue to the West Side Highway with an interruption between Eighth Avenue and Tenth Avenue. It is most noted for its strip between 10th and 11th Avenues, known as Club Row because it features numerous nightclubs and lounges.[7]

Some of the most notable venues are Marquee, Bungalow 8, Suzie Wong, Cain, Guesthouse, Pink Elephant, and Home.

In recent years, the nightclubs on West 27th Street have succumbed to stiff competition from Manhattan's Meatpacking District about fifteen blocks south, and other venues in downtown Manhattan.

Heading east, 27th Street passes through Chelsea Park between 10th and 9th Avenues, with the Fashion Institute of Technology (FIT) on the corner of 8th. On Madison Avenue between 26th and 27th streets, on the site of the old Madison Square Garden, is the New York Life Building, built in 1928 and designed by Cass Gilbert, with a square tower topped by a striking gilded pyramid. Twenty-Seventh Street passes one block north of Madison Square Park and culminates at Bellevue Hospital Center on 1st Avenue.

Lengths of streets [link]

Street Start End Length
24th Street 1st Avenue Madison Avenue 0.9 kilometres (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 0.5592340730136 | 1--1 }} mi)
24th Street 5th Avenue 12th Avenue 1.9 kilometres (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 1.1806052652509 | 1-0 }} mi)
25th Street FDR Drive Madison Avenue 1.2 kilometres (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 0.7456454306848 | 1--1 }} mi)
25th Street 5th Avenue 11th Avenue 1.7 kilometres (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 1.0563310268035 | 1-0 }} mi)
26th Street 30th Street/FDR Drive 12th Avenue 3.5 kilometres (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 2.1747991728307 | 1-0 }} mi)
27th Street 2nd Avenue 8th Avenue 1.7 kilometres (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 1.0563310268035 | 1-0 }} mi)
27th Street 9th Avenue 12th Avenue 0.8 kilometres (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 0.49709695378987 | 1--1 }} mi)

28th Street [link]

Three local subway stations:

Also:

31st and 32nd Streets [link]

31st Street begins on the West Side at the West Side Yard, while 32nd Street, which includes a segment officially known as Korea Way between Fifth Avenue and Broadway in Manhattan's Koreatown, begins at the entrance to Penn Station and Madison Square Garden. On the East Side, both streets end at Second Avenue at Kips Bay Towers and NYU Medical Center which occupy the area between 30th and 33rd Streets.

33rd Street [link]

For subway and PATH stations, see 34th Street

34th Street [link]

See 34th Street

42nd Street [link]

See 42nd Street

47th Street [link]

See 47th Street

50th Street [link]

See 50th Street

51st Street [link]

See 51st Street

52nd Street [link]

See 52nd Street

53rd Street [link]

See 53rd Street

54th Street [link]

See 54th Street

55th Street [link]

See 55th Street

57th Street [link]

See 57th Street

58th Street [link]

Shops along Designer Way

A section of East 58th Street {{#invoke:Coordinates|coord}}{{#coordinates:40|45|40.3|N|73|57|56.9|W|region:US-NY_type:landmark | |name= }} between Lexington and Second Avenues is known as Designers' Way and features a number of high end interior design and decoration establishments, including

  • Architects and Designers (A & D) Building
  • Urban Archeology
  • Foundry Lighting
  • Galerie Van den Akker
  • The Brass Center
  • Holly Hunt
  • Poggenpohl
  • B & B Italia

59th Street [link]

See 59th Street

66th Street [link]

See 66th Street

72nd Street [link]

See 72nd Street

79th Street [link]

See 79th Street

85th Street [link]

File:Second Ave NYC from 85th St.jpg
Looking south on Second Avenue from 85th Street (2005)

85th Street is a Westbound-running street between East End Avenue and Riverside Drive in the borough of Manhattan in New York City. 85th Street provides access to the 85th/86th Street Transverse which runs east-west through Central Park heading between the Upper East Side and Upper West Side.[8]

Congregation Kehilath Jeshurun, a synagogue was founded in 1872, is located on 85th Street, near Lexington Avenue. The lower division of the Ramaz School shares a building with the congregation.

The high-rise apartment building shown in the opening credits of The Jeffersons is located at East 85th Street and Third Avenue.

Mannes College of Music is a music school located on West 85th Street.

86th Street [link]

See 86th Street

96th Street [link]

See 96th Street

110th Street [link]

See 110th Street

112th Street [link]

{{#invoke:Coordinates|coord}}{{#coordinates:40.798188|-73.948471||||||| | |name= }}

112th Street East of Broadway

112th Street starts in Morningside Heights and runs from Riverside Drive to Amsterdam Avenue, where it meets the steps of the Cathedral of Saint John the Divine. The street resumes at the eastern edge of Morningside Park and extends through Harlem before ending at First Avenue adjacent Thomas Jefferson Park in East Harlem. Notable locations include:

116th Street [link]

See 116th Street

120th Street [link]

{{#invoke:Coordinates|coord}}{{#coordinates:40.8076|-73.9549|region:US-NY|||||| | |name= }} 120th Street traverses the neighborhoods of Morningside Heights, Harlem, and Spanish Harlem. It begins on Riverside Drive at the Interchurch Center. It then runs east between the campuses of Barnard College and the Union Theological Seminary, then crosses Broadway and runs between the campuses of Columbia University and Teacher's College. The street is interrupted by Morningside Park. It then continues east, eventually running along the southern edge of Marcus Garvey Park. It then continues through Spanish Harlem nearly to the East River, where it turns North into Paladino Avenue.

122nd Street [link]

{{#invoke:Coordinates|coord}}{{#coordinates:40.8088|-73.9540|region:US-NY|||||| | |name= }} 122nd Street is divided into three noncontiguous segments, E 122nd Street, W 122nd Street, and W 122nd Street Seminary Row, by Marcus Garvey Memorial Park and Morningside Park.

E 122nd Street runs four blocks (2,250 feet (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 685.8 | 1-2 }} m)) west from the intersection of Second Avenue and terminates at the intersection of Madison Avenue at Marcus Garvey Memorial Park. This segment runs in East Harlem and crosses portions of Third Avenue, Lexington, and Park (Fourth Avenue).

W 122nd Street runs six blocks (3,280 feet (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 999.744 | 1-2 }} m)) west from the intersection of Mount Morris Park West at Marcus Garvey Memorial Park and terminates at the intersection of Morningside Avenue at Morningside Park. This segment runs in the Mount Morris Historical District and crosses portions of Lenox Avenue (Sixth Avenue), Seventh Avenue, Frederick Douglass Boulevard (Eighth Avenue), and Manhattan Avenue.

W 122nd Street Seminary Row runs three blocks (1,500 feet (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 457.2 | 1-2 }} m)) west from the intersection of Amsterdam Avenue (Tenth Avenue) and terminates at the intersection of Riverside Drive. East of Amsterdam, Seminary Row bends south along Morningside Park and is resigned as Morningside Drive (Ninth Avenue). Seminary row runs in Morningside Heights, the district surrounding Columbia University, and crosses portions of Broadway and Claremont Avenue.

Seminary Row is named for the Union Theological Seminary and the Jewish Theological Seminary which it touches. Seminary Row also runs by the Manhattan School of Music, Riverside Church, Sakura Park, Grant's Tomb, and Morningside Park.

122nd Street is mentioned in the movie Taxi Driver by main character Travis Bickle as the location where a fellow cab driver is assaulted with a knife. The street and the surrounding neighborhood of Harlem is then referred to as "Mau Mau Land" by another character named Wizard, slang indicating it's a majority black area.

125th Street [link]

See 125th Street

La Salle Street [link]

{{#invoke:Coordinates|coord}}{{#coordinates:40.813|N|73.9575|W||||| | |name= }} La Salle Street is a street in West Harlem that runs just two blocks between Amsterdam Avenue and Claremont Avenue. West of Convent Avenue, 125th Street was re-routed onto the old Manhattan Avenue. The original 125th Street west of Convent Avenue was swallowed up to make the super-blocks where the low income housing projects now exist. La Salle Street is the only vestige of the original routing.

130th Street [link]

See 130th Street

132nd Street [link]

{{#invoke:Coordinates|coord}}{{#coordinates:40.814583|N|73.947944|W||||| | |name= }} 132nd Street runs east-west above Central Park and is located in Harlem just south of Hamilton Heights. The main portion of 132nd Street runs eastbound from Frederick Douglass Boulevard to northern end of Park Avenue where there is a southbound exit from/entrance to the Harlem River Drive. After an interruption from St. Nicholas Park and City College, there is another small stretch of West 132nd Street between Broadway and 12th Avenue

The 132nd Street Community Garden is located on 132nd Street between Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Boulevard and Malcolm X Boulevard. In 1997, the lot received a garden makeover; the Borough President's office funded the installation of a $100,000 water distribution system that keeps the wide variety of trees green. The garden also holds a goldfish pond and several benches. The spirit of the neighborhood lives in gardens like this one, planted and tended by local residents.

The Manhattanville Bus Depot (formerly known as the 132nd Street Bus Depot) is located on West 132nd Street between Broadway and Riverside Drive in the Manhattanville neighborhood.

135th Street [link]

Two subway stations:

137th Street [link]

One local subway station:

139th Street [link]

See 139th Street

145th Street [link]

See 145th Street

148th Street [link]

One subway terminal:

155th Street [link]

Western end
Eastern viaduct
Underneath; unconnected

155th Street is a major crosstown street considered to form the boundary between Harlem and Washington Heights. It is the northernmost of the 155 crosstown streets mapped out in the Commissioner's Plan of 1811 that established the numbered street grid in Manhattan.[9]

155th Street starts on the West Side at Riverside Drive, crossing Broadway, Amsterdam Avenue and Saint Nicholas Avenue. At Saint Nicholas Place, the terrain drops off steeply, and 155th Street is carried on a 1,600-foot (Bad rounding here{{#invoke:Math|precision_format| 487.68 | 1-2 }} m) long viaduct, a City Landmark constructed in 1893, that slopes down towards the Harlem River, continuing onto the Macombs Dam Bridge, crossing over (but not intersecting with) the Harlem River Drive.[10] A separate, unconnected section of 155th Street runs under the viaduct, connecting Bradhurst Avenue and the Harlem River Drive.

The New York City Subway serves 155th Street on the IND Eighth Avenue and Concourse Lines. Points of interest include:

157th Street [link]

One local subway station:

163rd Street [link]

One local subway station:

168th Street [link]

A station complex with platforms for two subway lines:

175th Street [link]

One local subway station:

181st Street [link]

See 181st Street

187th Street [link]

{{#invoke:Coordinates|coord}}{{#coordinates:40.853586|N|73.932233|W||||| | |name= }}

View of Hudson River from 187th Street, just west of Cabrini Boulevard.
West 187th Street leading to Hudson Heights. Stairs to Ft. Washington Avenue are visible at higher resolutions.

187th Street crosses Washington Heights and running from Laurel Hill Terrace in the east to Chittenden Avenue in the west near the George Washington Bridge and Hudson River. The street is interrupted by a long set of stairs east of Fort Washington Avenue leading to the Broadway valley. West of there, it is mostly lined with store fronts and serves as a main shopping district for the Hudson Heights neighborhood. [13]

187th Street intersects with, from East to West, Laurel Hill Terrace, Amsterdam Avenue, Audubon Avenue, Saint Nicholas Avenue, Wadsworth Avenue, Broadway, Bennett Avenue, Overlook Terrace, Fort Washington Avenue, Pinehurst Avenue, Cabrini Boulevard and Chittenden Avenue.

Amongst the many institutions on 187th Street are Mount Sinai Jewish Center and the uptown campus of Yeshiva University. The local public elementary school P.S. 187 is located on Cabrini Boulevard, just north of the eponymous 187th Street [14]

190th Street [link]

One local subway station:

191st Street [link]

One local subway station:

207th Street [link]

Two local subway stations:

215th Street [link]

One local subway station:

See also [link]

{{#invoke:Portal|portal}}

References [link]

  1. New York City Map
  2. Peretz Square, New York City Department of Parks and Recreation. Accessed July 12, 2007. "A sliver of Manhattan bounded by Houston Street, First Street and First Avenue, Peretz Square marks the spot where the tangled jumble of lower Manhattan meets the regularity of the Commissioners' Plan street grid."
  3. https://www.nysonglines.com/10st.htm
  4. https://www.nysonglines.com/17st.htm
  5. Horowitz, Joseph. "MUSIC; Czech Composer, American Hero", The New York Times, February 10, 2002. Accessed November 3, 2007. "IN 1991, the New York City Council was petitioned by Beth Israel Hospital to permit the demolition of a small row house at 327 East 17th Street, once the home of Antonin Dvorak."
  6. From the Magazine | A Letter From The Publisher, April 12, 1943.
  7. Ryzik, Melena. "Dance Hall Daze", The New York Times, November 5, 2006. Accessed October 7, 2007. "On my first night out, after a cruise through club row, the area around West 27th Street that is home to cavernous venues like Crobar and dens of exclusivity like Bungalow 8, I hit the Lower East Side."
  8. [1] 85th street, Manhattan on google maps
  9. REMARKS OF THE COMMISSIONERS FOR LAYING OUT STREETS AND ROADS IN THE CITY OF NEW YORK, UNDER THE ACT OF APRIL 3, 1807, accessed May 2, 2007. "These streets are all sixty feet wide except fifteen, which are one hundred feet wide, viz.: Numbers fourteen, twenty-three, thirty-four, forty-two, fifty-seven, seventy-two, seventy-nine, eighty-six, ninety-six, one hundred and six, one hundred and sixteen, one hundred and twenty-five, one hundred and thirty-five, one hundred and forty-five, and one hundred and fifty-five--the block or space between them being in general about two hundred feet."
  10. Gray, Christopher. "Streetscapes/The 155th Street Viaduct; An Elevated 1893 Roadway With a Lacy Elegance", The New York Times, July 9, 2000. Accessed November 10, 2007.
  11. Highbridge Park, New York City Department of Parks and Recreation. Accessed November 10, 2007.
  12. Directions to Rucker Park, InsideHoops.com. Accessed November 10, 2007.
  13. [2]
  14. [3]

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https://wn.com/List_of_numbered_streets_in_Manhattan

18th Street

18th Street may refer to:

  • 18th Street gang, an Hispanic street gang
  • 18th Street (IRT Broadway – Seventh Avenue Line); a subway station serving the 1 2 trains
  • 18th Street (IRT Lexington Avenue Line), an abandoned subway station; formerly serving the 4 6 <6> trains
  • 18th Street NW (Washington, D.C.)
  • See also

  • All pages beginning with "18th Street"
  • 18th Street (IRT Broadway – Seventh Avenue Line)

    18th Street is a local station on the IRT Broadway – Seventh Avenue Line of the New York City Subway. Located at the intersection of 18th Street and Seventh Avenue in Manhattan, it is served by the 1 train at all times, and by the 2 train during late nights.

    Station layout

    This station, which opened on July 1, 1918, has two side platforms and four tracks. It was renovated in 1991–2, but retains its original trim line and name tablet mosaics and no artwork was installed. Beige columns run along the entire length of both platforms with every other one having a name tablet.

    Each platform has a same-level fare control area that is staffed full-time and contains a turnstile bank, token booth, and two street stairs. The southbound side leads to both western corners of Seventh Avenue and 18th Street while the northbound side leads to the eastern corners.

    Each platform has an exit-only at the north end containing a platform level turnstile and emergency gate and single street staircase leading to 19th Street and Seventh Avenue (the southwest corner for the southbound side and southeast corner for the northbound one).

    18th Street station (Illinois)

    The 18th Street Station is a commuter rail station on the Near South Side of Chicago, at 18th Street near Calumet Avenue. It serves the Metra Electric Line north to Millennium Station and south to University Park, Blue Island, and South Chicago. For many Metra Electric trains, this is a flag stop, and the train will only stop there if specifically requested by a passenger.

    The station is also occasionally served by trains of the South Shore Line to Gary and South Bend, Indiana, on an exceptional basis for Chicago Bears home games during football season.

    The station was originally built by the Illinois Central Railroad (ICRR). The railroad was first built in 1907.

    References

    External links

  • Metra – Stations – 18th Street station
  • Station from Google Maps Street View

  • Manhattan

    Coordinates: 40°47′25″N 73°57′35″W / 40.79028°N 73.95972°W / 40.79028; -73.95972

    Manhattan (/mænˈhætən/, /mənˈhætən/) is one of the five boroughs of New York City, in the state of New York in the United States. The borough is coterminous with New York County, founded on November 1, 1683 as one of the state's original counties. The borough consists mostly of Manhattan Island, bounded by the East, Hudson, and Harlem Rivers, and also includes several small adjacent islands and Marble Hill, a small neighborhood on the mainland.

    Manhattan is often said to be the economic and cultural center of the United States and hosts the United Nations Headquarters. Anchored by Wall Street in the Financial District of Lower Manhattan, New York City has been called both the most economically powerful city and the leading financial center of the world, and Manhattan is home to the world's two largest stock exchanges by total market capitalization: the New York Stock Exchange and NASDAQ. Many multinational media conglomerates are based in the borough. Historically documented to have been purchased by Dutch colonists from Native Americans in 1626, for the equivalent of US$1050, Manhattan real estate has since become among the most expensive in the world, with the value of Manhattan Island, including real estate, estimated to exceed US$3 trillion in 2013.

    Manhattan (ship)

    Manhattan may refer to one of several ships:

  • Manhattan (1843 ship), ship that made the first authorized United States visit to Tokyo Bay
  • SS Manhattan (1931), a 1930s luxury liner
  • SS Manhattan (1962), tanker constructed to pass the Northwest Passage
  • For other US ships of that name, see USS Manhattan.

    Manhattan (YTB-779)

    Manhattan (YTB‑779/YT-800) is a United States Navy Natick-class large harbor tug named for Manhattan, New York.

    Construction

    The contract for Manhattan was awarded 31 January 1964. She was laid down on 1 October 1964 at Marinette, Wisconsin, by Marinette Marine and launched 15 July 1965.

    Operational history

    Assigned to the Pacific Fleet, Manhattan transited the Panama Canal and steamed to Hawaii for duty in the US Naval Shipyard at Pearl Harbor.

    Manhattan served in Viet Nam between November 1966 and September 1968.

    After Viet Nam, Manhattan was assigned to Naval Submarine Base Bangor.

    Stricken from the Navy List 1 October 2004, Manhattan was sold by the Defense Reutilization and Marketing Service (DRMS), 23 August 2005, to Grant Westmoreland, LMW Investments Inc. for $151,888.

    Ex-Manhattan was converted to twin z-drive and reacquired by the US Navy, 7 October 2008 and was designated as unnamed yard tug YT-800.

    Notes

    References

  • This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. The entry can be found here.
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