Local activists and community activists are celebrating the MTA's decision to retain at least some local service on the M14 A and D lines through the Lower East Side.
It was a day of high emotions on the Lower East Side Sunday, as longtime customers and vendors said goodbye to the old Essex Street Market building at 120 Essex St. The 1940 structure once described as "unlovely" by the New York Times, is now shuttered
Here's a look at some of the issues Community Board 3 will be taking up in May:
--On Thursday, May 16 at a meeting of the parks committee, officials from the city's Economic Development Corp. will update progress at Pier 42, which is very slowly becoming a new recreational area.
Those dreaded service changes on the L Train are just three days away, but we still don't know exactly how the M14 bus lines will be impacted.
Beginning at 8 p.m. on Friday, there will be reduced service on the...
Good morning! Jay Frank sent along this photo taken a week ago. Seemed appropriate as we await more rain today and over the weekend. It's Good Friday and the start of Passover tonight. Happy holidays!
Another building at Essex Crossing has been "topped off." Delancey Street Associates, the developers of the mega-project in the former Seward Park Urban Renewal Area, announced yesterday
Today we wrap up our series on the Essex Street Market with a profile of Top Hops, the Lower East Side craft beer store that opened an outpost in the market three years ago. This project has been a...
The Essex Street Market has for many years been a refuge for startup businesses. As retail rents in stand-alone brick-and-mortar locations have become unaffordable, the historic market has been one of the few places where new ventures can take...
Like many people on the Lower East Side, Emmanuel Diaz has mixed feelings about the the looming move of the Essex Street Market from its historic home to the brand new Essex Crossing mega-development across Delancey Street. Diaz, owner...
Big changes are, of course, coming very soon to the Essex Street Market. The vendors will be making the move from the market's historic home at 120 Essex St. across Delancey Street to a newly expanded space in the...