A look at the changing streetscape of Fifth Avenue and 57th Street, once the site of Cornelius Vanderbilt II's mansion, the largest single family home in the city at the time.
Cuban-American Albert Lopez returns from a trip to the homeland and shows us old Cuba, new Cuba and questions what is actually real.
In the dense fabric of Paris and the architectural typology of courtyards concealed by doors, you can peer into whole other worlds. Near Bastille, we uncovered a hidden factory with a revolutionary past and digital future.
An unusual duplex house that resembles an Italian villa in Audubon Park, Manhattan is now being restored.
Today marks the beginning of the end for Admiral's Row, the nineteenth-century row houses located at the edge of the Brooklyn Navy Yard.
The abandoned Philadelphia's Lorraine Hotel has rich history that covers racial integration, religious cults and the hand of real estate developers.
Laura Itzkowitz wanders along the South Street Seaport and delves into the history of Old New York from the days when it was New Amsterdam to the urban development of the Schermerhorn family in the 19th century.
At the legendary Forest Hills Tennis Stadium, birthplace of the U.S. Open, the ball may be back in court, saving it from demolition.
Photo recap of Landmark West's Landmark Feast held at the American Museum of Natural History.
A photo tour of Forest Hills: what once was, and what could be.