Call for Applications for the New City Critics fellowship
Join New City Critics, Urban Design Forum, and Urban Omnibus/The Architectural League for a conversation about the state of criticism on New York City’s built environment.
To receive updates on the latest news, events, offers, and more, join our mailing list.
Oct 27, 2017 | By Yukie Ohta
Dean & Deluca, the high-end food purveyor at the corner of Broadway and Prince Street, opened in 1973 as The Cheese Store at 120 Prince Street (between Greene and Wooster). In 1977, Giorgio DeLuca…
Sep 13, 2017 | By Yukie Ohta
462 Broadway has a long history on Broadway dating back to the early-19th century.
Aug 29, 2017 | By Yukie Ohta
What do P.T. Barnum, Boss Tweed, and Foursquare have in common?
Aug 1, 2017 | By Yukie Ohta
There was once a time when SoHo was threatened with becoming a victim of the City’s ambitious urban renewal efforts.
Jun 28, 2017 | By Yukie Ohta
Have you ever noticed the beautiful, intricate design carved into the sidewalk at the northwest corner of Broadway at Prince Street in front of the Prada store, one of the most heavily trafficked corners in New York City?
Jun 4, 2017 | By Yukie Ohta
The corner of Broadway and Houston Street, where two of New York’s major thoroughfares intersect, has gone through many changes since it was first settled in the early 1800’s.
May 2, 2017 | By Yukie Ohta
The Roosevelt Building, located at 478 Broadway (between Broome and Grand), was built in 1874 and designed by architect Richard Morris Hunt. It is said to be one of the most significant cast iron buildings in the world.
Mar 29, 2017 | By Yukie Ohta
Believe it or not, Canal Street was not only once an actual canal, but it was also the northernmost border of New York City.
Feb 28, 2017 | By Yukie Ohta
The Wall, Forrest “Frosty” Myers’ now iconic public art installation at the northwest corner of Broadway and Houston is also known as “The Gateway to SoHo.”
Feb 1, 2017 | By Yukie Ohta
In the late-1980s and into the 1990s, at the tail end of SoHo’s heyday as the center of New York’s gallery scene, small and often specialized galleries thrived along the Broadway corridor.
Dec 29, 2016 | By Yukie Ohta
SoHo’s Broadway in the 1970s mainly housed two kinds of ground floor businesses: textile/clothing wholesalers and the luncheonettes/diners that served to their employees/customers.
Oct 31, 2016 | By Yukie Ohta
If you walk by 555 Broadway, you will notice the name “Charles Broadway Rouss” emblazoned across its façade.
Aug 29, 2016 | By Yukie Ohta
In any discussion about SoHo preservation, the name Jane Jacobs usually comes up almost immediately. But there is another, lesser-known yet hugely influential figure in the saga of saving SoHo and preserving its architectural heritage: Margot Gayle.
Jul 31, 2016 | By Yukie Ohta
The St. Nicholas Hotel, on the west side of Broadway between Spring and Broome Streets, was a hotel like nothing New York City had seen before.
Jul 29, 2016 | By Yukie Ohta
Here are some more stories about how our neighborhood’s streets got their names.
Jun 20 | Culture
Join New City Critics, Urban Design Forum, and Urban Omnibus/The Architectural League for a conversation about the state of criticism on New York City’s built environment.
Jun 22 | Culture
Center for Italian Modern Art Nanni Balestrini: Art As Political Action – One Thousand And One Voices
Aug 31 | Culture
Judd Foundation presents Robert Irwin, an exhibition of three works at 101 Spring Street in New York.
Call for Applications for the New City Critics fellowship
By The Architectural League and the Urban Design Forum
Closing – Nanni Balestrini: Art As Political Action – One Thousand And One Voices
By Center for Italian Modern Art
Closing: Robert Irwin at Judd Foundation on August 31
By Judd Foundation
Stay Tuned! More events to come.
By SoHo Broadway Initiative