Local residents will start to see changes in Straus Square during the next several weeks, as the neglected area at East Broadway, Rutgers Street and Canal Street begins to look more like a full-fledged pedestrian plaza. The changes were outlined last night at a meeting of Community Board 3’s Parks Committee.
As previously reported, the community board has already approved the closure of a one block section of Canal Street alongside Seward Park. Last night’s presentation before the parks panel dealt with design and programming aspects of the plan. Seward Park is about to undergo a $6.4 million renovation as part of the Parks Without Borders Program. The idea behind the Straus Square changes is to make the plaza feel like it’s an extension of the park.
Wet Paint: NFT Collective Whines Over Cryptopunks Sale, Coveted Young Artist Joins Hauser & Wirth, & More Art-World Gossip
Which art dealer is sitting courtside at Knicks playoff games? What famed artist-made house hit the market? Read on for answers.
Nine CryptoPunks at Christie s 21st-century evening sale on May 13, 2021. Courtesy of Christie s.
Every week, Artnet News Pro brings you Wet Paint, a gossip column of original scoops reported and written by Nate Freeman. If you have a tip, email Nate at [email protected]
Love them or hate them and believe you me, people do hate them!
NFTs have done one thing that unites disparate parts of the art market: make people rich. Sources said
My last indoor dining experience of 2020 was in early March. I had crispy roast duck, watercress and assorted dumplings at Wu’s Wonton King, at the junction of Chinatown and the historic Jewish Lower East Side. Located at the foot of the Forward Building, Wu’s occupies the site of the old Garden Cafeteria, what used to be the center of New York Jewish intellectual life. Where tanks of jostling Alaskan king crabs are found today, Forward writers and Yiddish literati once kibitzed over kreplach and kugel.
Wu’s wasn’t a random dinner choice. The day before, I heard Wellington Chen, executive director of Chinatown Partnership, and James Beard Award-Winning chef Grace Young on public radio, urging New Yorkers to eat and shop in Chinatown. Chinatown was New York’s first coronavirus victim even before the first diagnosis. News of the virus from Wuhan spurred many Chinese immigrants to start social-distancing early. skipping their Lunar New Year family banquets.
Producer Kendall picked up some wontonz from the Wonton King! | NewsRadio KFBK | Pat Walsh | 7pm iheart.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from iheart.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
PUBLISHED: 02/26/2021
This month, HRN’s 40+ series explored some of the most pressing issues facing the food industry and the world at large. The Farm Report projects progress for creating sustainable food and farm practices and policy, while Eating Matters looks beyond food banks, soup kitchens and SNAP benefits to understand what it will really take to end domestic hunger. As the pandemic and the isolating winter months continue to take a toll on us all, The Big Food Question dives deep into psychological well-being in the restaurant industry and Processing addresses a listener letter about grief and mourning.
Levity can also be found in our lineup through compelling human interest stories, inspiring career journeys and celebrations of Black History Month and African American cuisine. Hear from the soul food school scholar, Adrian Miller in conversation with Chef Todd Richards, enjoy learning more about Why Food? host Vallery Lomas in an interview on All in the Industry, and