Filtering by: New York NY 2015

Harlem, New York: Art Sculptures in Harlem
Aug
16
11:30 AM11:30
USA

Harlem, New York: Art Sculptures in Harlem

Join us to explore Harlem. We will start at the National Black Theatre, walk through Marcus Garvey Park to see installation art, walk west on 121st street to the Harriet Tubman Statue on St Nicholas Ave, head back to the Adam Clayton Powell statue on 7th Ave and 125th street, and finish at Studio Museum Harlem, which has free admission on Sundays. 
 
“Gutting,” is a new play written by Jeremy Kamps, being produced in Harlem by Company Cypher at the National Black Theatre, September 24 - October 3. “Gutting” is set three years after Hurricane Katrina and follows 14-year-old runaway Kali and the people around her who struggle to keep their homes in the Lower 9th Ward from being gutted. As part of the production and the ten-year-anniversary of the Hurricane, we are hosting various Jane Jacobs Walks in Harlem, so audiences can see the real impact of urban development and displacement, and have discussions about gentrification, displacement, and race issues that affect us here in Harlem. For more information, go to www.gutting2015.org or check it out on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/guttingbyjeremykamps

Date:  Sunday, August 16, 2015

Time: 11:30 AM - 1:30 PM

Event Start/End: 
BEGIN: National Black Theatre, 2031 5th Ave, NYC 10035 (btwn 125th & 126th streets)
END: Studio Museum Harlem, 144 West 125th Street, NYC 10027

Host: Members of "Gutting," a new play at the National Black Theatre
guttingjanejacobswalks@gmail.com

Theme: Walking

Accessibility: This event is accessible and open to children and strollers.

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May
2
12:00 PM12:00

New York, NY: Teeming Tenements Transformed: A Lower East Side Walking Tour

  • 108 Orchard St NY, NY, 10002 United States (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

The guided tour will focus on the history and architecture of the Lower East Side with particular attention to the housing, institutions and businesses that were the center of immigrant life. The tour will highlight the impact of housing reforms reflected in the changes to the plans and features of tenements over time. “We will see pre-Old Law, Old Law and New Law tenements and look up at the elaborate terra cotta ornamentation that distinguishes many buildings,” said Mitchell Grubler, the tour’s leader.
 
Although endangered, a number of blocks south of Delancey Street still retain the sense of place that would be familiar to our immigrant ancestors. “The Lower East Side is where millions of immigrants have taken their first steps in the New World on the road to the American Dream,” wrote Joyce Mendelsohn, tour co-leader and author of the definitive guidebook to the area, 'The Lower East Side Remembered and Revisited.' The structures that housed some of the institutions and businesses which served the multitudes of immigrants will also be highlighted. The tour will pass a Neo-Renaissance style school designed by architect, C.B.J. Snyder in 1897; the former Good Samaritan/Eastern District Dispensary built in 1890; the 12-story former Jarmulowsky Bank of 1911-12; as well as a number of other significant buildings.

Find out more at Friends of the Lower East Side

Date: Saturday, May 2, 2015, Rain Date: Saturday, May 9, 2015

Time: 12 noon - 2:00 pm

Event Start/End:
Start: The southeast corner of Delancey and Orchard Streets, New York, NY
End: TBA

Host: Friends of the Lower East Side, friendsoftheles@gmail.com

Registration: No, all are welcome

Accessibility:  Adults capable of walking 1 1/2 miles

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New York, NY: Upper West Side Urban Renewal: Blight or Right in the Sight of Jane?
May
2
11:00 AM11:00

New York, NY: Upper West Side Urban Renewal: Blight or Right in the Sight of Jane?

  • 325 Central Park West New York, NY, 10025 United States (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Looking down 100th Street from Central Park West: On the north side what Jane loved—tenements, store fronts, a remnant of the old neighborhood where the ghosts of Billie Holiday, James Weldon Johnson, and Arthuro Schomberg still hover. On the south side—what Moses wrought—towering Park West Village with Le Corbusier the spectral presence. Question (with sixty years hindsight): the West Side lives and thrives because of or in spite of urban renewal? We’ll walk 100th Street and nearby streets taking into consideration what urban renewal did and did not deliver in regard to low and moderate income housing, mixed-use development, and neighborhood vitality.

Date: Saturday, May 2, 2015

Time(s): 11:00 AM start

Event Start/End: 

  • BEGIN 325 Central Park West (between 92nd and 93rd St)
  • End: 400 Central Park West (at 100th St), back garden

Post Walk Picnic (optional): by the pond nearest the 100th St entrance to Central Park at the Firemen statue in Washington Square Park, near the corner of Columbus Ave and Filbert St.

Host: Lynne ElizabethNew Village Press hello@newvillagepress.net

Theme: Walking

Accessibility: This event is accessible and open to Wheelchairs, Bicycles, Seniors, Children, an easy walk along paved sidewalks.

Registration: No, all are welcome.

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