Wednesday, May 5, 2021

New York World Trade Center Subway Station and Brookfield Place

https://youtu.be/Y6kzHM7XOvk

New York Lower Manhattan Battery Park, Wold Trade Centre Subway Station designed by Santiago Calatrava From Spain, Brookfield Place.
Brookfield Place, built and still commonly referred to as the World Financial Center, is a shopping center[1] and office-building complex located across West Street from the World Trade Center in the Battery Park City neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City. Overlooking the Hudson River, Brookfield Place has been home to offices of various companies including Merrill Lynch, RBC Capital Markets, Nomura Group, American Express, Bank of New York Mellon, Time Inc. 95.5 K-LOVE, 96.7 Air1, and Brookfield Asset Management. 
Designed by architect César Pelli,[8] with Adamson Associates, the World Financial Center complex was built by Olympia and York between 1982 and 1988[9] on the landfill used to build Battery Park City.[10] The fill material consisted of dirt excavated during the building of the World Trade Center, as well as garbage and other debris.
The World Trade Center station opened on July 6, 1971, as a replacement for Hudson Terminal, which was closed and demolished as part of the construction of the World Trade Center. Following the September 11, 2001 attacks, a temporary PATH station opened in 2003 while the World Trade Center complex was being rebuilt.

A New York subway station located directly under the Twin Towers that was totally destroyed when they collapsed in the 9/11 terrorist attacks has finally reopened, 17 years layer.

Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava's vast ribbed structure that soars over the World Trade Center Transportation Hub in New York

Calatrava has also designed a Greek Orthodox Church to replace a nearby building destroyed during 9/11.

Brookfield Place is owned by Toronto-based Brookfield Office Properties,except for the space occupied by American Express, which is owned by the American Express Company. 250 Vesey Street serves as the United States headquarters for Brookfield Office Properties.Brookfield Place has its own zip code, 10281. The buildings' original developer was Olympia and York, also based in Toronto.

The buildings are:

  • 200 Liberty Street, formerly One World Financial Center, (1986)[5] height 577 feet (176 m), 40 stories
    • Leasable area: 1,628,000 square feet (151,200 m2)
    • Rooftop: truncated square pyramid
  • 225 Liberty Street, formerly Two World Financial Center, (1987), height 645 feet (197 m), 44 stories
    • Leasable area: 2,491,000 square feet (231,400 m2)
    • Rooftop: round dome
  • 200 Vesey Street, formerly Three World Financial Center, (also known as American Express Tower) (1985), height 739 feet (225 m), 51 stories
    • Leasable area: 1,200,000 square feet (110,000 m2)
    • Rooftop: pyramid
  • 250 Vesey Street, formerly Four World Financial Center, (1986), height 500 feet (150 m), 34 stories ("North Tower")
    • Leasable area: 1,800,000 square feet (170,000 m2)
    • Rooftop: ziggurat
  • Winter Garden Atrium (1988) a 45,000 square feet (4,200 m2) glass domed pavilion housing various plants, trees and flowers, also shopping areas, cafes (located between buildings 2 and 3), rebuilt 2002 after terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001. The pavilion also exhibits a range contemporary artists including Reyna Noriega,[6] Julia Whitney Barnes, Tatiana Arocha, Anne Beffel, Jane Benson, Curtis Cuffie, Charles Goldman, Elke Lehmann, Pia Lindman, Brian P. McGrath, Andrea Ray, and Alex Villar.[7]
    • Leasable area: 295,000 square feet (27,400 m2)
  • One North End Avenue, also known as the New York Mercantile Exchange building (1997), height 253 feet (77 m), 16 stories
    • Leasable area:500,000 square feet (46,000 m2)
Olympia & York (also spelled as Olympia and York, abbreviated as O&Y) was a major international property development firm based in Toronto, Canada. The firm built major financial office complexes including Canary Wharf in London, the World Financial Center in New York City, and First Canadian Place in Toronto. It went bankrupt in the early 1990s and was recreated to eventually become Olympia & York Properties.

The company was founded by Paul Reichmann and his brothers, Albert and Ralph, in Toronto in the early 1950s as an outgrowth of their Olympia Flooring and Tile Company.[2] It first built and operated warehouses and other commercial buildings in Toronto. Its first major project was the development of the vast Flemingdon Park project on Don Mills Road.[3]

The company then took a major gamble, winning the fierce bidding war for the final undeveloped property at the corner of King and Bay street (the geographic heart of Canada's financial district). The Reichmans won the contract to build Canada's tallest building, First Canadian Place in 1971. The project almost collapsed, however, when reformist mayor David Crombie put a halt to major development projects. After three years of lobbying the project finally went ahead to great success.[citation needed]

The Golden 80sEdit

In the 1980s, Olympia & York grew to be the largest property development firm in the world.[2] In the early 1980s, the New York real estate market was severely depressed, and the Reichmanns bought a group of nine skyscrapers for the low price of $300 million. In only a few years the group rose in value to $3.5 billion. The company became centred on New York opening an office on Park Avenue. The company won the rights to the largest development project in the city when they were awarded the contract to develop the Battery Park City infill next door to the World Trade Center. This project became the World Financial Center and was another great success for the firm.

Both Reichmann brothers were strongly religious Haredi Jews and shut down their construction sites for the Jewish Sabbath and for all Jewish holidays. Even while the success of O&Y made them one of the world's richest families they continued to live relatively austere lives.

In the mid-1980s the company diversified. In 1985 it bought Gulf Canada,[4] a deal that attracted much controversy because it earned the company multimillion-dollar tax breaks. They also acquired a 50.1% control of Brinco Ltd.[5] in 1980 then the following year an 82% controlling interest in Abitibi-Price Inc.[6] As well, they held a significant shareholding in the Royal Trustco.[7] In 1980, they had also acquired English Property Corp,[5] one of the largest British developers, which would eventually lead to the Canary Wharf property development. Following a highly publicized legal battle with Britain's Allied Lyons PLC[5] for control of Canadian-based distillers Hiram Walker-Gooderham and Worts Distillery,[5] the makers of the popular Canadian Club brand of rye whiskey, in 1987 Olympia & York became Allied Lyons' largest shareholder.

In the late 1980s, the company undertook to develop the Canary Wharf site in the east of London. The 83-acre (336,000 m2) site would become the largest development project in the world, which would incorporate One Canada Square, Britain's tallest skyscraper at the time. The project ran into problems, however. Britain entered a recession, British firms were unwilling to relocate from the traditional financial centre within the City, and despite a personal promise by Margaret Thatcher, the London Underground line known as the Jubilee Line Extension was delayed in construction awaiting the contributions from Olympia & York (with the line eventually opening in the year 2000). The office space at Canary Wharf remained largely empty and Olympia & York began to run out of cash. At the same time, New York City and its real estate market began a deep recession and Olympia & York, who was now the largest property holder in Manhattan, began to feel cash flow problems which deeply affected the pyramid-like financing strategy that the Reichmann brothers had adopted.

BankruptcyEdit

In March 1992, Paul Reichmann was forced to resign[8] as president. In May, the company filed for bankruptcy and it owed over 20 billion dollars[8] to various banks and investors. The company was finally dismembered in February 1993, and the Reichmanns were left with only a small rump known as Olympia & York Properties Corporation. The new company has again grown into a multibillion-dollar firm, including retaining a large stake of the now prosperous Canary Wharf project. However, they no longer have large holdings in New York City. Many of the NYC properties are now under Brookfield Properties Corporation.


The company was founded by Paul Reichmann and his brothers, Albert and Ralph, in Toronto in the early 1950s as an outgrowth of their Olympia Flooring and Tile Company.[2] It first built and operated warehouses and other commercial buildings in Toronto. Its first major project was the development of the vast Flemingdon Park project on Don Mills Road.[3]

The company then took a major gamble, winning the fierce bidding war for the final undeveloped property at the corner of King and Bay street (the geographic heart of Canada's financial district). The Reichmans won the contract to build Canada's tallest building, First Canadian Place in 1971. The project almost collapsed, however, when reformist mayor David Crombie put a halt to major development projects. After three years of lobbying the project finally went ahead to great success.[citation needed]

The Golden 80sEdit

In the 1980s, Olympia & York grew to be the largest property development firm in the world.[2] In the early 1980s, the New York real estate market was severely depressed, and the Reichmanns bought a group of nine skyscrapers for the low price of $300 million. In only a few years the group rose in value to $3.5 billion. The company became centred on New York opening an office on Park Avenue. The company won the rights to the largest development project in the city when they were awarded the contract to develop the Battery Park City infill next door to the World Trade Center. This project became the World Financial Center and was another great success for the firm.

Both Reichmann brothers were strongly religious Haredi Jews and shut down their construction sites for the Jewish Sabbath and for all Jewish holidays. Even while the success of O&Y made them one of the world's richest families they continued to live relatively austere lives.

In the mid-1980s the company diversified. In 1985 it bought Gulf Canada,[4] a deal that attracted much controversy because it earned the company multimillion-dollar tax breaks. They also acquired a 50.1% control of Brinco Ltd.[5] in 1980 then the following year an 82% controlling interest in Abitibi-Price Inc.[6] As well, they held a significant shareholding in the Royal Trustco.[7] In 1980, they had also acquired English Property Corp,[5] one of the largest British developers, which would eventually lead to the Canary Wharf property development. Following a highly publicized legal battle with Britain's Allied Lyons PLC[5] for control of Canadian-based distillers Hiram Walker-Gooderham and Worts Distillery,[5] the makers of the popular Canadian Club brand of rye whiskey, in 1987 Olympia & York became Allied Lyons' largest shareholder.

In the late 1980s, the company undertook to develop the Canary Wharf site in the east of London. The 83-acre (336,000 m2) site would become the largest development project in the world, which would incorporate One Canada Square, Britain's tallest skyscraper at the time. The project ran into problems, however. Britain entered a recession, British firms were unwilling to relocate from the traditional financial centre within the City, and despite a personal promise by Margaret Thatcher, the London Underground line known as the Jubilee Line Extension was delayed in construction awaiting the contributions from Olympia & York (with the line eventually opening in the year 2000). The office space at Canary Wharf remained largely empty and Olympia & York began to run out of cash. At the same time, New York City and its real estate market began a deep recession and Olympia & York, who was now the largest property holder in Manhattan, began to feel cash flow problems which deeply affected the pyramid-like financing strategy that the Reichmann brothers had adopted.

Bankruptcy

In March 1992, Paul Reichmann was forced to resign as president. In May, the company filed for bankruptcy and it owed over 20 billion dollars[8] to various banks and investors. The company was finally dismembered in February 1993, and the Reichmanns were left with only a small rump known as Olympia & York Properties Corporation. The new company has again grown into a multibillion-dollar firm, including retaining a large stake of the now prosperous Canary Wharf project. However, they no longer have large holdings in New York City. Many of the NYC properties are now under Brookfield Properties Corporation.


Brookfield Properties

Brookfield Properties is a North American subsidiary of commercial real estate company Brookfield Property Partners, which itself is a subsidiary of alternative asset management company Brookfield Asset Management. It is responsible for the property management of the company's real estate portfolio, which includes facilities in the officemulti-family residentialretailhospitality, and logistics industries.[3]

Brookfield Properties
TypeSubsidiary
IndustryReal estate
Founded1923; 98 years ago
HeadquartersBrookfield Place
Area servedWorldwide
Key peopleBrian Kingston (CEOBrookfield Property Partners)
ServicesProperty development and management
RevenueIncrease US$2.4 billion (2014)
Net incomeIncrease US$2.8 billion (2014)
Total assetsIncrease US$34.4 billion (2014)
Number of employees2,264 (2008)[1]
ParentBrookfield Property Partners
Websitewww.brookfieldproperties.com

Brookfield Properties operates corporate offices in New York CityTorontoLondonSydney, and São Paulo. It is the second-largest shopping mall operator in the United States, after GGP Inc. (General Growth Properties) was acquired by Brookfield Property Partners and merged into Brookfield Properties in 2018.


The company's roots go back to the early 1900s in MontrealQuebec. It was known then as the Canadian Arena Company and operated the Montreal Arena. In a partnership with Toronto investors, it built the Arena Gardens in Toronto. In the 1920s, it built the Montreal Forum to house the Montreal Maroons and Montreal Canadiens National Hockey League franchises; from 1935 to 1957, the company also owned the Canadiens. The company was acquired by Edper Investments in 1970. During the 1970s, when the company was known as Carena Properties, it expanded its business into commercial real estate.[5] After the Montreal Forum closed, the Forum was sold to competitor Canderel Properties.

In 1989, Carena acquired a 33% interest in Olympia & York Developments Ltd., developers of the World Financial Center in New York,[6] and in 1990, Brookfield acquired a 50% interest in a portfolio of office properties in Toronto, Denver and Minneapolis from BCE Development Corporation. In 1994, this holding was increased to 100% and included BCE Place, now Brookfield Place, Brookfield Properties' flagship office complex in Toronto.[7]

In 1996, Carena acquired a 46% interest in World Financial Properties, a corporation formed from the bankruptcy of Olympia & York, which included three of the four towers of the World Financial Center, One Liberty Plaza245 Park Avenue in Manhattan. That year, Carena changed its name to Brookfield Properties Corporation.[8]

In 1997, Brookfield Properties purchased 45% of Gentra, Inc., owner of several commercial properties in Toronto.

2000

In 2000, Brookfield Properties acquired a portfolio of Calgary office properties, including the Bankers Hall complex.

In April 2001, the company lost out to Silverstein Properties, Inc. on the lease of the World Trade Center in New York City before the complex was destroyed during the September 11 attacks.[11]

In 2003, Brookfield Properties completed the spin-off of Brookfield Homes, now part of Brookfield Residential, Brookfield Asset Management's U.S.-based home building business.[12]

In 2005, Brookfield Properties acquired a 25% interest in O&Y Properties Corporation and O&Y Real Estate Investment Trust, expanding the company's real estate portfolio in four Canadian cities.[13]

In 2006, the company acquired Trizec Properties, which was founded in 1960 by William Zeckendorf, builder of Place Ville Marie.

World Trade Center is a terminal station on the PATH system, within the World Trade Center complex in the Financial District of ManhattanNew York City. It is served by the Newark–World Trade Center line at all times, as well as by the Hoboken–World Trade Center line on weekdays, and is the eastern terminus of both.


Location70 Vesey Street
ManhattanNew York City
Coordinates40.7115°N 74.0114°W
Owned byPort Authority of New York and New Jersey
Line(s)Downtown Hudson Tubes
Platformsisland 

New York City Subwayu

The World Trade Center station is near the site of the Hudson and Manhattan Railroad (H&M)'s Hudson Terminal, which opened in 1909. The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey bought the bankrupt H&M system in 1961, rebranded it as PATH, and redeveloped Hudson Terminal as part of the World Trade Center. The World Trade Center station opened on July 6, 1971, as a replacement for Hudson Terminal, which was closed and demolished as part of the construction of the World Trade Center. Following the September 11, 2001 attacks, a temporary PATH station opened in 2003 while the World Trade Center complex was being rebuilt. Work on a permanent station building commenced in 2008. The main station house, the Oculus, opened on March 3, 2016, and the terminal was renamed the World Trade Center Transportation Hub, or "World Trade Center" for short.

The World Trade Center station has five tracks and four platforms in the middle of a turning loop. Trains from New Jersey use the loop to turn around and head back to New Jersey. The platforms are located four floors below ground level. The floor immediately above the platforms is occupied by the station's fare mezzanine. The New York City Subway's WTC Cortlandt station is adjacent to and above the mezzanine.

The $4 billion Oculus station house, designed by the Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava, consists of white ribs that interlock high above the ground. The interior of the station house contains two underground floors, which house part of the Westfield World Trade Center mall. The transportation hub connects the various modes of transportation in Lower Manhattan, from the Fulton Center in the east to the Battery Park City Ferry Terminal in the west, and includes connections to various New York City Subway stations. It is the fifth-busiest transportation hub in the New York metropolitan area. The new station has received mixed reviews: although the hub has been praised for its design, it has also been criticized for its high costs and extended delays.

Architect: Santiago Calatrava
Opened: March 3, 2016
Platforms: 3 island platforms, 1 side platform
Rebuilt: 2003 (temporary); 2016 (as World Trade Center Transportation Hub)
Lower Manhattan
The original World Trade Center was a large complex of seven buildings in the Financial District of Lower Manhattan, New York City, United States. It opened on April 4, 1973, and was destroyed in 2001 during the September 11 attacks.

Sunday, April 18, 2021

Governor Island New York USA


Fort Jay

Fort Jay is a coastal star fort and the name of a former United States Army post on Governors Island in New York Harbor, within New York City. Fort Jay is the oldest existing defensive structure on the island, and was named for John Jay, a member of the Federalist Party, New York governor, Chief Justice of the Supreme CourtSecretary of State, and one of the founding fathers of the United States. It was built in 1794 to defend Upper New York Bay, but has served other purposes. From 1806 to 1904 it was named Fort Columbus, presumably for explorer Christopher Columbus. Today, the National Park Service administers Fort Jay and Castle Williams as the Governors Island National Monument.







Governors Island is a 172-acre island in New York Harbor, within the New York City borough of Manhattan. It is located approximately 800 yards south of Manhattan Island, and is separated from Brooklyn to the east by the 400-yard-wide Buttermilk Channel. Wikipedia
Area: 172 acres
Purpose

State Island New York ISA

What is Staten Island known for?
Staten Island boasts more than 9,300 acres of parkland, giving it the nickname as the greenest borough.
...
14 Top-Rated Attractions & Things to Do on Staten Island, NY
  • Staten Island Ferry. ...
  • Snug Harbor Cultural Center & Botanical Garden. ...
  • Chinese Scholar's Garden. ...
  • Staten Island Museum. ...
  • National Lighthouse Museum. ...
  • Fort Wadsworth.

Staten Island boasts more than 9,300 acres of parkland, giving it the nickname as the greenest borough. Often referred to by its residents as the "forgotten borough," this southernmost borough has unique attractions that make it stand out from the rest of New York City.

The borough once held the record for having the largest landfill in the world, but it has since turned its trash into treasure by cleaning and repurposing the land for a sprawling public park, known as Fresh Kills Park, set to open in its entirety in 2036. Another restored and reimagined gem is the Snug Harbor Cultural Center & Botanical Garden, providing visitors a place to visit for contemplation among Ming Dynasty gardens of the Chinese Scholar's Garden and Temple Row's Greek Revival buildings.

There's no subway connecting Staten Island to the rest of the boroughs. However, within the island, you'll find a rapid transit line by the Staten Island Railway (SIR).

Sitting right underneath Bayonne in New Jersey, it seems more a part of the Garden State than New York, but nevertheless it's an essential part of the Big Apple, and it's just a 25-minute ride on the Staten Island Ferry from Manhattan and a quick car ride from Brooklyn over the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge.


nug Harbor Cultural Center & Botanical Garden

Snug Harbor Cultural Center & Botanical Garden
Snug Harbor Cultural Center & Botanical Garden

The Smithsonian-affiliated Snug Harbor Cultural Center & Botanical Garden is a cultural and natural oasis not too far from the St. George Ferry Terminal, situated on the north shore of the island.

Spread across an 83-acre campus, former retirement buildings for sailors are now part of a regional cultural center featuring a number of highlights, including the 19th-century Greek Revival buildings on Temple Row, Staten Island Children's Museum, Newhouse Center for Contemporary Art, Botanical Garden, and the Staten Island Museum.

On the grounds, you will also find a chapel and one of the oldest concert halls in the country. You can easily spend an entire day with your family, exploring the various cultural institutions and wandering about the gardens.

For those interested in haunted experiences, there are several tours available to explore the ghosts of Snug Harbor's buildings - the Butcher's Cottage, Matron's House, and the former Surgeon's House.

Address: 1000 Richmond Terrace, Staten Island, New York

Official site: https://snug-harbor.org/


Our Lady of Rosary Church Lower Manhattan New York USA


OUR LADY OF THE ROSARY


  • Church of Our Lady of the Rosary
    Seton Shrine
    7 State Street
    New York, NY 10004


  • History

    Our Lady of the Rosary began through the inspiration of Charlotte Grace O’Brien, another faithful woman, who, like Elizabeth Seton, was born a Protestant. The daughter of the famous Irish patriot and rebel William Smith O’Brien, Charlotte O’Brien’s concern for young female Irish immigrants victimized in America led first to the establishment of an Irish immigrant mission and then a church serving the people of lower Manhattan.
     
    In 1881 O’Brien watched young Irish girls being herded aboard a steamship in Dublin. Bound for America, the steamship carried young women from Ireland to an uncertain future in the New World as participants of a British government policy of assisted immigration. O’Brien knew that as soon as they disembarked at Castle Garden, these young immigrants would be preyed upon by individuals who, by offering assistance with jobs or lodging, lured them into brothels. 
     
    In 1882, O’Brien travelled to New York on an emigrant ship to learn firsthand what the real circumstances were.  Her experience convinced her that she had a duty to help these young women.  As her advocate in this endeavor she chose Bishop John Ireland of St. Paul, Minnesota, who had established a program that resettled impoverished Irish immigrant families from eastern slums on farms in the Midwestern United States.
     
    O’Brien met with Bishop Ireland and proposed a mission consisting of an information bureau at Castle Garden, a temporary shelter to provide accommodation for immigrants, and a chapel. The Archbishop sympathized with the dire situation O’Brien laid out and promised his support of providing assistance until the young women could contact relatives or secure employment.  He approached Irish societies and secured the cooperation of John Cardinal McCloskey of New York.

    The mission was established in 1883 with Father John Joseph Riordan as its pastor. Following O’Brien’s plan, Fr. Riordan had three goals for the project: to establish a Catholic Bureau at Castle Garden to provide information and counseling to arriving immigrants, to offer temporary housing for immigrants while they waited be reunited with their families or friends or until they found work, and to establish a chapel for the spiritual support of immigrants.
     
    Riordan bought property on State Street in 1885 and immediately began the task of looking after the young Irish girls as soon as they arrived in New York City. He played no favorites. Any girl was welcome no matter what her religious belief. Before the tide of immigration had died down, the mission befriended more than 100,000 immigrant girls (of whom 65,000 are listed in the parish archives). Not one of them had to pay anything for the assistance they received—the whole project was purely an act of Christian charity.  Click here for more information on the Irish Mission at Watson House.
     
    In 1886 Cardinal McCloskey divided St. Peter’s Parish and directed that the 1500 Catholics living in Lower Manhattan and on the Harbor Islands be constituted as the Parish of Our Lady of the Rosary.
     
    The mission occupied two buildings on State Street—8 State, where Elizabeth Seton had lived between 1801 and 1803 and bore her fifth and last child—and 7 State, the Watson House, built by importer James Watson in 1793.  Inside these two buildings were a reading room, offices, and temporary accommodations for immigrant girls.  An 1897 New York Times article described how the “grand salon of the old mansion” had been turned into a chapel.
     
    By the early 1960s both buildings had deteriorated to the point that 8 State Street, Elizabeth Seton’s former home, was demolished, and the Watson House next door was gutted inside and reconstructed as a rectory.  Architects Walter Knight Sturges and Joseph Sanford Shanley, who was a descendant of Mother Seton, designed a new church for the 8 State Street site in a style that drew from the Federal and Georgian periods to complement the Watson House next door.  It is said that Sturges and Shanley planned the sanctuary to be reminiscent of a ballroom because of Elizabeth Seton’s love of dancing.  Outside, above the entrance looking out over New York harbor, is a white marble statue of Mother Seton sculpted by Robert E. Gaspari.  Francis Cardinal Spellman dedicated the shrine on September 8, 1965.
     
    Charlotte Grace O’Brien returned to Ireland before having the chance to see the completion of the mission she was largely responsible for creating.  However, upon returning to Ireland, she was received into the Catholic Church, the church of her ancestors. 

    In 2015, the Parish of the Our Lady of the Rosary was merged back into St Peter's Parish to form St Peter -Our Lady of Our Rosary Parish.

 St Peter - Our Lady of the Rosary
Parish Center Office
(Entrance on Church Street)
22 Barclay Street
New York, NY 10007

Open Monday-Thursday 10:30 am -3:30 pm  
and Saturday 9:00 AM to Noon
212-233-8355
info@spcolr.org
+
spcbeca- St. Peter's  Church  below Canal 

 

Travel To New York World Trade Center station and Building MET

Impossible sculptures at Metropolitan Museum of Art or MET Brookfield Place New York City One World Center Paintings at the Metropolitan Mus...