Neighborhoods

Washington Heights & Inwood

Washington Heights is on the high ridge in Upper Manhattan that rises steeply north of the narrow valley that carries 133rd Street to the former ferry landing on the Hudson River that served the village of Manhattanville.

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Theater District

The Theater District first began to attract theaters and restaurants to the neighborhood after the Metropolitan Opera House moved to West 39th Street and Broadway in 1883.

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South Street Seaport

It features some of the oldest architecture in downtown Manhattan, and includes the largest concentration of restored early 19th-century commercial buildings in the city.

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NYU Area

It is one of only three universities in the New York State metropolitan areas to have schools of law, medicine and engineering, all of which are ranked in the “top 50” according to the US News & World Report.

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Morningside Heights

Morningside Heights is part of the Upper West Side. However, it has been described as part of “Greater Harlem”. As the city grows and residents move in and out, neighborhood names change as well.

 

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Midtown East

Midtown Manhattan is the busiest single commercial district in the United States and ranks among the most intensely used pieces of real estate in the world.

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Hudson Square

Hudson Square is unique among neighborhoods in that a great deal of the land and buildings here are owned by one company, Trinity Real Estate, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Trinity Church.

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Gramercy Park

The park is at the core of both the neighborhood referred to as either Gramercy or Gramercy Park and the Gramercy Park Historic District. The tallest buildings in the area top out at around 20 stories, and older buildings of 3-6 floors are numerous.

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Garment District

The Garment District has been known since the early 20th century as the center for fashion manufacturing and fashion design in the United States, and even the world.

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El Barrio (Spanish Harlem)

The area slowly grew to encompass all of Italian Harlem, as Italians moved out and Latinos moved in during another wave of Latino immigration after the Second World War. Since the 1950s, East Harlem has been dominated by residents El Barrio.

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Upper East Side

The area was defined by the attractions of the bluff overlooking the East River, which ran without interruption from James William Beekman's "Mount Pleasant", north of the marshy squalor of Turtle Bay, to Gracie Mansion.

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Midtown West

It is home to some of the city’s most iconic buildings, including the Empire State Building, the Chrysler Building, and the United Nations Headquarters.

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West Chelsea/Far West Side

The conversion of the High Line to an elevated urban park has stimulated much real estate development in West Chelsea, such as these two luxury apartment buildings, “Highline 519” and “HL23” on 23rd Street

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Tribeca

The area was among the first residential neighborhoods developed in New York beyond the boundaries of the city during colonial times, with residential development beginning in the late 18th century. 

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NoHo/ Central Village

The district also contains early-nineteenth century houses, nineteenth- and twentieth-century institutional buildings, turn-of-the-century office buildings, as well as modest twentieth-century commercial structures.

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Hell’s Kitchen

From being the home base of the Westies, dangerous gang from the industrial neighborhood days. Today Hell's Kitchen is an increasingly upscale neighborhood of affluent people, as well as residents from the 'old days'.

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