News

In a category that has displayed distress for several years, the commercial/office sector has begun to show signs of life, ...
Social engineering fraud refers to a hacker impersonating a trusted individual to induce the victim into releasing funds to ...
According to a range of statistical indicators that are grouped together under the rubric of “Human Development,” the square ...
A much-anticipated reopening of public space in the Battery, originally slated for October, will be delayed until at least February because the National Park Service (NPS) has encountered delays in ...
The self-guided, three-mile, 90-minute journey through Lower Manhattan (starting at the Battery and finishing at Federal Hall ...
Lower Manhattan residents are pushing back against a plan by federal officials to fence off approximately 16,000 square feet of public space behind an eight-foot tall barricade in the Civic Center ...
A new report by City Comptroller Brad Lander indicates that the 467-m tax incentive program, which aims to spur conversions of obsolete office properties to residential use while requiring that some ...
A public meeting on July 22 offered Lower Manhattan residents a glimpse of plans to transform the local waterfront, as well as a voice in the design process. The City’s Economic Development ...
So successful has New York’s several-times-a-year nosh-fest become that Restaurant Week has nearly outgrown its name. This summer’s version starts this afternoon and runs for 28 days (through August ...
The office of Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg has announced the conviction of Sean Mescall, who had been passing himself off as a lawyer for three years, while working out of an expensive ...
Trinity Church Allocates $16 Million to Non-Profits Near and Far Trinity Church, the oldest, largest, and most prolific philanthropic organization in Lower Manhattan, has announced the results from ...