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Apartment Rentals near NYC Landmarks
New York City is one of the most visited cities in the world and there are several landmarks, some of them historical buildings are others impressive new buildings. You can get information on different landmarks in New York and available apartment buildings near them from Domain Properties NYC Real Estate Company. One such landmark is the Trinity Church, which was built in 1697. 53 Park Place in Tribeca is near this landmark and there are rental apartments available. This used to be a commercial building and it is now a doorman building in a tree-lined neighborhood that has expansive greenery and spectacular water views. You can live in the 22-story 50 Murray. This is a full-service building, also in Tribeca. Near this building is the new 89 Murray which is a luxury building near St. John's University. Other options near the Trinity Church are the Barclay Tower, which is a 396-unit luxury apartment building on 10 Barclay Street in downtown Manhattan, and the 15-story Metro Building on John Street. Another New York City landmark is the Mcgraw Hill Building on 330 West 42nd Street. McGraw Hill is one of the best known publishers and an apartment building near this landmark is the Ivy Tower in Clinton. This 45-story building is close to the Theater District and Times Square and it is made of orange brick and glass. You can live in the 53-story Biltmore, also in Clinton. The building has 464 units and a fitness center, a business center, a residents' lounge that has a fireplace, a gaming area, a screening room, and other amenities. Also in Clinton is the New Gotham, which is a 33-story residential building. Another option is the Emerald Green in Garment District. This is a good choice if you want to play a pro-active role in conserving the environment since the building is all about energy efficiency. If you want to live near the landmark African Burial Ground on 290 Broadway, you can live in 88 Leonard in Tribeca. Tribeca is a luxurious neighborhood and the architecture is historic. However, this building has one of the most modern looks in Tribeca. Another option is the 145 Spring Street in SoHo. This is a loft building with impressive duplex apartments located near Broadway. You can also live in the 16-story Saranac on Worth Street which is an attractive building built in the design of pre-war buildings in 2000.If you want an apartment near the Lincoln Center, you can live in the Grand Tier on Broadway. This is a bit expensive, but you get your money’s worth because the building has features such as French tapestry, uniquely interior design, elaborate marble-accented lobby, and other features. You can also live in the Regent in 45 West 60th Street. The building got a 5-star renovation back in 1996 and it is in Manhattan’s luxurious Upper West Side. You can live in the Marc in Clinton. This is a booming neighborhood and the building has luxurious apartments. You can live in the Nicole, also in Clinton. The 2004 building is boxy and it 18-stories of 149 apartments.
Bronx Brooklyn Manhattan Queens Staten IslandManhattan -- Downtown Midtown UptownDowntown19 Rector Street, Lafayette A. Goldstone, 1929-30 (National Register - photos) 21 West Street, Starrett & Van Vleck, 1929-31 210 East 68th Street, Blum & Blum, 1928 (National Register - photos) 315-325 West 36th Street, Blum & Blum, 1926 (National Register - photos) 49 East 80th Street, Harry Allen Jacobs, 1929-30 (National Register - photos) American Stock Exchange, Starrett & Van Vleck, 1929-31 (National Register - photos unavailable) Bankers Trust Building, 14 Wall Street, addition, Shreve, Lamb & Harmon 1931-33 Barclay Vesey Building and Interior, 140 West Street, McKenzie, Voorhees & Gmelin, 1923-27 Central IND Substation, 126 West 53rd Street, 1932 (National Register - photos) City Bank-Farmers Trust Company Building (edge of Deco), 20 Exchange Place, Cross & Cross, 1930-31 Downtown Athletic Club, 19 West Street, and its neighboring office building (now apartments) at 21 West Street, both by Starrett & Van Vleck, 1929-30 Insurance Company of North America Building, 99 John Street, (National Register - photos) Irving Trust Company (formerly - now Bank of New York), 1 Wall Street, Voorhees Gmelin & Walker, 1931 Long Distance Building of the American Telephone & Telegraph Company, now AT&T Headquarters, and Interior, 32 Sixth Avenue, Voorhees, Gmelin & Walker, 1930-32 Manhattan Company Building, 40 Wall Street, H. Craig Severance, 1929-30 New School for Social Research interior, Joseph Urban, 1930-31 Substation 235 (aka Greenwich Substation), 23 West 13th Street, 1932 (NR - photos) Substation 409 (aka Stanton Street Substation), 163 Essex Street, 1936 (NR - photos) US Post Office/Federal Building, 90 Church Street, Cross & Cross et. al., 1934-38 (NR - photos) Western Union Building, 60 Hudson Street, and Interior, Voorhees, Gmelin & Walker, 1928-30. Midtown2 Park Avenue, Ely Jacques Kahn, 1926-28 275 Madison Avenue, Kenneth Franzheim, 1930-31 American Radiator Building, 40 West 40th Street, Raymond Hood, 1923-24 Beaux-Arts Apartments, 307 and 310 East 44th Street, Kenneth M. Murchison and Raymond Hood, Godley & Fouilhoux, 1929-30 Beaux-Arts Institute of Design, 304 East 44th Street, Dennison & Hirons, 1928 Chanin Building, 122 East 42nd Street, Irwin S. Chanin with Sloan & Robertson, 1927-29 Chrysler Building and Interior, 405 Lexington Avenue, William Van Alen, 1928-30 Daily News Building and Interior, 220 East 42nd Street, Raymond M. Hood, 1929-30 Empire State Building and Interior, 350 Fifth Avenue, Shreve, Lamb & Harmon, 1929-31 Film Center Building Interior, 630 Ninth Avenue, Ely Jacques Kahn, 1928-29 Fuller Building and Interior, 41 East 57th Street, Walker & Gillette, 1928-20 General Electric Building, 570 Lexington Avenue (originally RCA Building), Cross & Cross, 1929-31 Goelet Building, now Swiss Center, and lobbies, 608 Fifth Avenue, Victor L.S. Hafner and Edward Hall Faile, 1930-32 Hearst Magazine Building, 951-969 Eighth Avenue, Joseph Urban, 1927-28 Horn & Hardart Building, 2710-2714 Broadway, Frederick Putnam Platt & Brother, 1930 L.P. Hollander & Company Building, 3 East 57th Street, Shreve, Lamb & Harmon, 1929-30 McGraw Hill Building, 330 West 42nd Street, Raymond Hood, Godley & Fouilhoux, 1930-31 Metropolitan Life Home Office Complex, Madison Avenue from 23rd to 25th steets, (NR - photos) Panhellenic Tower, now the Beekman Tower Hotel, 3 Mitchell Place, John Mead Howells, 1928 Rockefeller Center, Associated Architects and others, 1931-1955 (for the last additions), including 600 Fifth Avenue, 30 Rockefeller Plaza Interior and the International Building Interior, and the lobby and auditorium of Radio City Music Hall Starrett-Lehigh Building, 601-625 West 26th Street, Cory & Cory, 1930-31 Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, 301 Park Avenue, Schultze & Weaver, 1929-31 UptownCentury Apartments, 25 Central Park West, Irwin S. Chanin, 1931 Eldorado Apartments, 300 Central Park West, Margon & Holder, 1929-31 Highbridge Play Center, Amsterdam Avenue between West 172nd Street and West 174th Street, Aymar Embury II etc., 1934-36 Kent Automatic Parking Garage, now Sofia Apartments, 33-43 West 61st Street, Jardine, Hill & Murdock, 1929-30 Majestic Apartments, 115 Central Park West, Irwin S. Chanin, 1930-31 Master Building, 310-312 Riverside Drive, Helmle, Corbett & Harrison, 1928-29 Midtown Theater, now Metro Theater, 2624-2626 Broadway, Boak & Paris, 1932-33 Normandy Apartments, 140 Riverside Drive, Emery Roth & Sons, 1939-39 Substation 219 (aka Harlem Substation), 309 West 133rd Street, 1932 (NR - photos) 369th Regiment Armory, administration building, 2360 Fifth Avenue, Van Wart & Wein, 1930-33 Thomas Jefferson Play Center, First Avenue between 111th and 114th Street, Aymar Embury II etc., 1935-36 BronxBronx County Courthouse Building, 851 Grand Concourse, Max Hausle and Joseph H. Freedlander, 1931-35 Crotona Play Center and Interior, Fulton Avenue between East 172nd and 174th streets, Aymar Embury II etc., 1934-36 Dollar Savings Bank and Interior (plus amendment), 2516-2530 Grand Concourse, Halsey, McCormack & Helmer, 1932-33, with additions in 1937-38 and 1949-52 Herman Ridder Junior High School, 1619 Boston Road, Walter C. Martin, 1929-31 Park Plaza Apartments, 1005 Jerome Avenue, Horace Ginsberg and Marvin Fine, 1929-31 Rainey Memorial Gates, Bronx Zoo, Paul Manship, 1934 BrooklynBetsey Head Play Center, Thomas Boyland Street between Livonia and Dumont Avenues, Aymar Embury II etc., 1934-35 Brooklyn Public Library, Central Building, Grand Army Plaza, Githens & Keally, 1941 Long Island Headquarters of the New York Telephone Company, 97-105 Willoughby Street, Ralph Walker (of Voorhees, Gmelin & Walker), 1929-30 McCarren Play Center, Lorimer Street between Driggs Avenue and Bayard Street, Aymar Embury II etc., 1934-36 Red Hook Play Center - Sol Goldman Pool, 155 Bay Street, Aymar Embury II etc., 1934-36 Sunset Play Center and Interior, Seventh Avenue between 41st Street and 44th Street, Aymar Embury II etc., 1934-36 QueensAstoria Park Pool and Play Center, 19th Street between 22nd Drive and Hoyt Avenue North, Aymar Embury II etc., 1935-36 J. Kurtz & Sons Store, 162-24 Jamaica Avenue, Jamaica, Allmendinger & Schlendorf, 1931 La Casina, 90-33 160th Street, Jamaica, c.1933 Marine Air Terminal and Interior, La Guardia Airport, Delano & Aldrich, 1939-40 Ridgewood Savings Bank, 107-55 Queens Boulevard, Halsey, McCormack & Helmer, 1939-40 Suffolk Title and Guarantee Building, Jamaica, Queens, Dennison & Hirons, 1929 Staten IslandLane Theater lobby and auditorium, 168 New Dorp Lane, John Eberson, 1937-38 Tompkinsville (Joseph H. Lyons) Pool and Interior, Victory Boulevard at Murray Hulbert Avenue, Aymar Embury II etc., 1934-36 •Apartments for sale
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