Frederick Law Olmsted may be best known for designing Central Park, but he contributed to many other landscaping projects in NYC.
The Elizabeth Street Garden in Manhattan’s Little Italy is a community garden filled with an eclectic assemblage of statuary. The
Frederick Law Olmsted is considered by many as the “father of American landscape architecture,” co-designing many famous urban parks with
On the south shore of Staten Island, an abandoned house is the only remnant of what was Frederick Law Olmsted's farm where he conducted his early experiments that would lead to his famous landscape designs for Central Park and more.
On Staten Island, Frederick Law Olmsted's home has been left abandoned but the NYC Landmarks Conservancy is campaigning and fundraising to save it.
The Preservation League of New York State has released their annual "Seven to Save" list.
The Surrogate’s Courthouse is a seven-story Beaux-Arts building located at 31 Chambers Street in the Civic Center district of Manhattan.
The Staten Island Railway has been operational since the early 1880s and functions as the only rapid transit line on the entire island.
At the back of the historic Forest Hills Inn at 1 Station Square lies a long-lost architectural gem, the Forest Hills Tea Garden.
Unknown to many, collections of cherry blossom trees in New York City come from the initial gift from Japan in 1909-1912 to Washington D.C.