Vintage 1970s Photos Show Lost Sites of NYC's Lower East Side
A quest to find his grandmother's birthplace led Richard Marc Sakols on a mission to capture his changing neighborhood on film.
A dive bar is probably not the first place one would look to find New York City’s rich history.
Don’t be ashamed to admit it — you have your set of three or four flavors you get every time
Original piece photographed by Bob Cooley (@bobcooley), before it was partially defaced Leave it to the city’s construction workers
We took a weekend break from Banksy-mania, but here’s what happened. The awesome vantage point of these photographs comes
One of two safes with unlaundered liquor money left over from Prohibition in the basement of William Barnacle Tavern Prohibition
Banksy’s Day 5 Mobile Waterfall. Photo via Banksy Instagram. As if in response to the rapid paint-over that took
Five Corners, Angel Heart, and The Verdict, and the Sex and the City movie also filmed scenes in this establishment
At first glance, the area around Tompkins Square Park seems like the quintessential New York City neighborhood, with its lively
Moorish Revival architecture is still flourishing in every corner of Manhattan: Structures from Chinatown to the Upper East Side carry
The future Alamo Plaza at Astor Place. Rendering by WXY Architecture. Remember when there was a parking lot where this
The East Village may be gentrifying, but it’s still one of the last refuges for bohemia in Manhattan, and
When Odessa shuttered its doors early Sunday morning, New York City bid farewell to one of its finest dive bars.
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