Lower East Side
Fighting for Good Fortune
Geoffrey Gray |
The Lower East Side Tenement Museum, dedicated to showcasing the lives of tenants of times past, may be evicting contemporary ones.
The Lower East Side Tenement Museum, dedicated to showcasing the lives of tenants of times past, may be evicting contemporary ones.
You can beat NIMBY forces that fight residences for people with mental illness, but building bridges can take as much work and time as building the apartments.
Barely six years after the city forcibly evicted squatters from five city-owned tenements on the Lower East Side and handed then over to an affordable housing developer, the buildings are right back where they started: on the city’s list of tax-delinquent properties.
The streets of Fort Greene have a lot going for them: elegant brownstones, shady trees, hip cafes and zealous police patrols. An aggressive cop crackdown on parolees and project-dwellers now divides the neighborhood into two halves: the suspected and the protected.
A three-year struggle to save a Lower East Side community center could end today,as the city sheriff plans to post an official eviction notice on the doors of CHARAS.
An experiment in green living leaves a mixed legacy.
Back to the Old Neighborhood
How Carmen Pabon became one of the loudest voices on the Lower East Side.
New York’s public housing tenants and advocates charge that a decades old federal law to provide paying jobs for tenants has been all but ignored.