

ALL ABOUT THE UPPER WEST SIDE:
Broadway, brownstones, books, and some of the city's best bagels... the
Upper West Side extends north from Columbus Circle at 59th Street up to
110th Street, and is bordered by Central Park West and Riverside Park. The
Upper West Side is separated from the Upper East Side by Central Park. This
is the traditional stronghold of the city's intellectual, creative, and
moneyed community, but the atmosphere is not as upper crust as the Upper
East Side. Elegant, pre-war buildings along the boulevards of Broadway,
West End Avenue, Riverside Drive, and Central Park West meet shady, quiet
streets lined with brownstones. Much of the area is protected by landmark
status, and the neighborhood's restored townhouses and high-priced co-op
apartments are coveted by actors, young professionals, and young families.
The Upper West Side boasts an impressive list of "firsts": The
oldest Baptist congregation in the U.S. (founded 1753; First Baptist Church,
Broadway and 79th St.); the oldest Spanish and Portuguese Jewish congregation
in New York (established 1654; Congregation Shearith Israel, Central Park
West and 70th St.); the world's largest bible collection (American Bible
Society, with 37,000 items); the first fireproof building in NYC (122 West
78th St., built by Rafael Guastavino in 1883); the oldest school in the
U.S. (Collegiate School, West End Avenue and 77th St.; founded 1628); and
the world's largest carillon (the Laura Spelman Rockefeller Carillon, in
Riverside Church, and the largest tuned bell, the "Bourdon").
Sidewalks in this neighborhood are always crowded during the day with performers rushing to auditions and families pushing their babies in imported strollers. In the evenings, however, the action moves inside, where singles mingle in myriad restaurants and bars. Stroll along Columbus Avenue to investigate the glitzy boutique-and-restaurant strip; walk along Amsterdam Avenue with its mix of bodegas, bars, and boutiques. Along Central Park West are such titanic habitats as the buff colored, castle-like Dakota, where John Lennon was killed and Yoko Ono still lives (respects may be paid across the street in Central Park's Strawberry Fields memorial). Other interesting architectural jewels along the avenue include The Lanhgam (a 1920s Italian Renaissance-style high rise); the twin-towered San Remo (home sweet home over the years to such luminaries as Rita Hayworth, Dustin Hoffman, Paul Simon, and Diane Keaton); and The Kenilworth, with its impressive pair of ornate front columns, once the home of Michael Douglas.Cultural attractions include the dinosaur-filled American Museum of Natural History and Rose Center for Earth and Space, the New-York Historical Society (whose collection reaches from the 1600s to today), and the Children's Museum of Manhattan. Dining choices include two of the city's most beautiful restaurants - the romantic Café des Artistes and fantastical Tavern on the Green, plus a mind-boggling variety of cafés and restaurants along Columbus Avenue, serving everything from deli sandwiches to burritos to haute cuisine.
WELCOME
TO THE UPPER WEST SIDE APARTMENT RENTALS, NYC
New York City Apartments NYC, NY
Manhattan
Call
212-777-7543 or
email us: steveh100@aol.com
412 Sixth Ave., New York NY 10011, Suite 404