West Park Presbyterian Church
Amid the scores of high-rise luxury apartment buildings lining West 86th Street, you’ll find an oddity of sorts. A red sandstone Romanesque Revival style church building sits under a scaffold at the corner of West 86th and Amsterdam Avenue. With its ornate windows and a tower at least 10 stories high that overlooks the intersection, the building sets itself apart from most others in this primarily residential neighborhood.
This building—West Park Presbyterian Church—has had more than its fair share of controversy, the latest of which involving its designation as a New York City Landmark. The city’s Landmark Preservation Commission voted to make the church a landmark in January, and that vote was upheld by the City Council, making it official on May 13.
Dunkin’ Donuts vs. Starbucks: Who’s the coffee king of the Upper West Side?
Competition is brewing on the Upper West Side.
For years, Starbucks has been dominating the coffee business on the Upper West Side. There are 16 – yes, 16 – Starbucks locations in the neighborhood, most of which opening in the late 90’s and early 2000’s. In fact, when Starbucks came to New York City in 1994, they opened their first location on 87th Street and Broadway. Oddly enough, it is the only Upper West Side location to have ever closed down (it shut its doors in 2003, a Capital One bank now takes its place.) However, Starbucks may have reason to be jittery, and it has nothing to do with caffeine.
Enter the challenger: Dunkin’ Donuts.
Student MetroCards the main issue at MTA hearing, Upper West Siders affected by MTA budget cuts too
Plenty of angry, fed-up Manhattanites made their voices heard March 4 at the Metropolitan Transportation Authority’s public hearing on its proposed fare hikes and service cuts.
The main issue of the hearing, which took place at the Haft Auditorium at the Fashion Institute of Technology, was the cuts to student MetroCards, which benefit more than 550,000 students, according to the Straphangers Campaign.
Zabar’s: an Upper West Side institution
Check out our knishes!” a voice exclaims on the PA, as customers seeking shelter from the cold pace around, stopping every now and then when they see an item that they might want to buy. “We have all types of knishes! Potato knishes, spinach knishes, garlic knishes, whatever you want, we’ve got it! And they’re all baked right here at Zabar’s!”
Zabar’s. You would be very hard-pressed to find someone who lives on the Upper West Side that has never heard of Zabar’s.
Taking up roughly two-thirds of the block on Broadway between 80th and 81st Streets, Zabar’s has been an Upper West Side institution for decades. To anyone who happens to pass by the store and peer inside the window, it looks like a typical supermarket. However, once you step inside, you’ll see that it is anything but. Read more…