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Created by Richard Lowry Updated On: February 27, 2023
A selection of sites along the Historic East River Waterfront from Astoria in Queens to the Columbia Waterfront in Brooklyn. See our Google Site, Tumblr page and You Tube Videos!
Richard Lowry: An arch bridge over the East River built for the New York Connecting Railroad line in 1917 by Henry Hornbostel (architect) and Gustav Lindenthal (engineer).
19 19th St (btwn Ditmars Blvd & Astoria Pk S), Queens, NY
Park · Astoria · 96 tips and reviews
Richard Lowry: 56 acres along East River were acquired to create William Jay Gaynor Park (after the city's mayor from 1909 to 1913). However it was quickly renamed Astoria Park in December 1913.
Richard Lowry: Fort Stephens was built in 1814, as part of the city's defenses against the British during the War of 1812. It was named after Gen. Ebenezer Stevens, who lived near Hallett’s Cove.
9-01 33rd Rd (at Vernon Blvd), Long Island City, NY
Art Museum · 68 tips and reviews
Richard Lowry: It was set up in an abandoned factory space in Ravenswood, Queens by Japanese sculptor Isamu Noguchi (1904-1988) in 1985. It currently hosts an exhibition on the future of Ravesnwood.
btwn Vernon Blvd & 21st St (btwn 40th & 42nd Ave), Queens, NY
Housing Development · Queensbridge · 14 tips and reviews
Richard Lowry: Built in 1939, the Queensbridge Houses were built to house about 3,000 families with an annual income limit of $1,400. The site in Ravenswood was chosen due to the low cost of the land.
Richard Lowry: The Ed Koch Queensboro Bridge, also known as the 59th Street Bridge is a cantilever bridge over the East River that was completed in 1909.
State or Provincial Park · Hunters Point · 132 tips and reviews
Richard Lowry: Gantry State Park was constructed in 1994-98, around gantriest that were used to transfer freight cars off of barges carrying them to Long Island from railway termini in New Jersey.
Richard Lowry: Gothic Revival church, by architect Patrick Charles Keely, constructed in 1887. It was an anchor of the Irish Catholic immigrant community that populated Hunters Point in the late19th century.
Police Station · Hunters Point · 2 tips and reviews
Richard Lowry: Designed by R. Thomas Short and constructed in 1903. This was part of a wave of municipal construction in Hunters Point after the consolidation of the five boroughs in 1898.
Seafood Restaurant · Hunters Point · 33 tips and reviews
Richard Lowry: Formerly Miller's Hotel. Built in 1881 by Oliver Charlick it was a popular gathering place for influential Queens politicians, a haven for gamblers, and the site of attempted murders and fist fights.
Richard Lowry: The creation of a nature walk on the Newtown Creek Wastewater Treatment plant’s property provides one of the only continuous public access points to Newtown Creek.
Richard Lowry: The original plant was completed in 1967 but has undergone significant renovation as of 2009. It is the largest of 14 wastewater treatment plants in New York City.
State or Provincial Park · Williamsburg · 78 tips and reviews
Richard Lowry: This park in northern Williamsburg is the former site of the Brooklyn Eastern District Terminal, Brooklyn's largest waterfront rail terminal, active until 1983.
Richard Lowry: Fulton Ferry is the site of the first passenger ferry service between Manhattan and Brooklyn, as well as the first steamboat ferry, introduced by Robert Fulton in 1814.
Historic and Protected Site · Brooklyn Navy Yard · 2 tips and reviews
Richard Lowry: Constructed in 1841-51 as the first permanent dry dock in the New York area and it remains in active use today. Its pumpwell could empty it in 90 mins and fill it in 40 mins.
History Museum · Brooklyn Navy Yard · 12 tips and reviews
Richard Lowry: Designed by Philadelphia architect Thomas U. Walter in 1857., Building 92 now houses exhibits on the Brooklyn Navy Yard’s two centuries of military and industrial history.
Richard Lowry: Memorial to US soldiers that died on prison ships in Wallabout Bay during the Revolution. The 1st tomb was on Hudson Ave but a 2nd memorial was built in Fort Greene Park by McKim, Mead & White in 1905
Richard Lowry: Sandwiched between a power plant and five blocks of Domino Sugar factory, and anchored by a 70-foot-tall brick smokestack from a long-gone molasses plant.
Richard Lowry: Originally the Havemeyers & Elder Filter, Pan & Finishing House, this icon of industry, built in 1881-84, was once the tallest structure on the Brooklyn waterfront.