Hudson River Park’s Pier 57 Wins ’22 New York State Historic Preservation Award
The Hudson River Park Trust today announced that Pier 57 (thirty minutes from Harlem) has received a 2022 New York State Preservation Award.
The Hudson River Park Trust today announced that Pier 57 (thirty minutes from Harlem) has received a 2022 New York State Preservation Award.
New York City Mayor Eric Adams today appointed four new members to the board of the New York City Economic Development Corporation (NYCEDC).
The Hudson River Park Trust will open Pier 26 on September 30th, 2020, just 30 minutes south from Harlem, the first new public pier to open in the four-mile-long Hudson River Park in a decade.
The Opportunity Zones program was enacted late last year as part of the federal tax overhaul, the Opportunity Zones program provides tax incentives to developers who invest in historically distressed neighborhoods throughout the U.S.
Crains NY reports that with a WeWork office in Harlem, the $20 billion provider of flexible workspace, was close to signing a lease at the city’s tallest office tower.
On September 17, 2018, New York City Economic Development Corporation (NYCEDC) hosted its 2018 Development Finance Conference: Investing for Impact in NYC at Convene.
The Real Deal reports that Extell Development chief Gary Barnett has locked down $65 million in financing from Apollo Global Management for a still-undisclosed development project in East Harlem.
“If you haven’t walked around this area and you’re a real estate bloodhound, it smells like it’s going to be the [next] Meatpacking District,” Emerging markets like Northern Manhattan are offering real estate investors “huge potential for growth,” though such growth is dependent on continued investments in transportation and infrastructure, market players said at a…
Dear President Biden, Senate Majority Leader Schumer, Senate Minority Leader McConnell, House Speaker McCarthy, and House Minority Leader Jeffries.
The Adams administration today released an open letter from over 200 business, civic, and labor leaders from Harlem to Hollis.