Plaza33, the pedestrian plaza at Penn Station that has displayed artworks from Keith Haring and Roy Lichtenstein has a new installation: a human pyramid.
Throughout the course of New York's 400-year history, Bowling Green has seen its fair share of historic events. It's not surprising that it's full of secrets.
In a "Post-Moses New York," we can reexamine how we invest in public transit infrastructure to build a system that can efficiently move people around.
Television presenter Ben Hedges, aka the "lao wei" (foreigner), takes us on an internal video tour of Times Square's giant, blinged-out advertisement signs.
The New York City subway system is one of the world's largest public art galleries with hundreds of art installations scattered throughout its 430 stations.
The concrete walls of the Carmelite Monastery in Brooklyn are high, lined with barbed wire, and protected with shards of broken glass and small angel figurines
New York City has transformed at an astonishing rate, and parts of the city are hardly recognizable from the gritty urban decline of the 1970’s and 80’s.
Mayor Gregor Robertson calls the Arbutus Corridor "Vancouver's chance to have a New York-style High Line,” the successful park on Manhattan’s West Side.
Join Tom Rinaldi, author of the book "New York Neons" as he guides us through the history and future of a dozen vintage neon signs in West Village, New York.
The New-York Historical Society has in its collection the 1933 Double Eagle coin, sold at auction in 2002 for $7,590,020, which would be $10.28 million in 2017.