An empty lot sitting on the Grand Concourse at the corner of E Burnside in…
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Our friends over at Brick Underground have put together a look at living on The…
We’re back with the Daily News’ Subway Fare series featuring great places to eat along…
Only in The Bronx is a beloved landmark building, PS 31 aka the Castle on…
The Daily News just posted another one of their ‘Subway Fare’ articles on cool restaurants…
A co-op apartment at Executive Towers on the Grand Concourse has shattered a record on…
Sure it’s a deluxe apartment in the sky on the 20th floor of Executive Towers…
This Sunday is the launch of The Bronx’s largest Open Streets event, the much anticipated…
Coming soon to the Grand Concourse will be a towering 24 story building (the tallest on The Grand Concourse) on the site of the former and beloved PS 31 aka Castle on The Concourse which we fought very hard to save from demolition—surpassing Executive Towers, built in 1963, by one story.
Tonight at the Bronx Museum between 6:30PM and 9:00PM, the community has a chance to envision what the Grand Concourse should and can look like.
The Grand Boulevard and Concourse, as it was originally known, is The Bronx’s most treasured thoroughfare as well as the closest we have to a “Main Street”. We were able to preserve part of the Concourse by pushing for landmark status which it received in 2011.
“THE Grand Concourse, the four-and-a-half-mile boulevard that for much of its life was described as the Champs-Élysées of the Bronx, has often sat for its portrait, as have many of the handsome buildings along its flanks. But there is one image that captures in poignant fashion exactly what the street represented in the mid-20th century.
It is a grainy black-and-white snapshot of a boy named Sam Goodman, a third-generation boulevard resident, wearing a dressy coat and hat and standing in front of the Lorelei fountain in Joyce Kilmer Park. Anyone who knew the area would recognize the luscious white-marble concoction of mermaids and riverfront siren, which had been created in Germany in 1893 and brought to the Bronx with much fanfare six years later.
In October of 2011, after almost two years from being calendared for consideration, of community meetings, historical studies, and testimonies from residents, homeowners and landlords alike, the New York City Landmarks Commission created the Grand Concourse Historic District stretching from 153rd Street and the Grand Concourse, all the way up to 167th Street.
Now, over 3 years later since that designation, the terracotta colored street signs with white lettering which mark a historic district, are finally being installed with signs at 161st Street and Grand Concourse and west on 161st and Walton.
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