Posts Tagged ‘Century 21’

Back to the Future For the Financial District

Thursday, January 26th, 2012

Stone Street in the Financial District

By Liz Berger

Our mission at the Alliance for Downtown New York is to advance Lower Manhattan as a global model for a 21st century central business district, a compelling place to work, live and visit.  This objective contemplates the future as well as the past, because for much of the last 400 years our community has been both commercial and residential. Though the canyons of 20th century Wall Street were business-only, the Financial District first took shape in the 1700s as securities traders who lived in the neighborhood met to make deals under a buttonwood tree near what is now 68 Wall.

So it’s back to the future for the Financial District. I’ve been proud to witness firsthand its most recent resurgence—as New York City’s premier live/work community. The transition from business-only to business-plus was just starting when I moved below Fulton Street in 1982.

The neighborhood was starkly different then. In fact, it wasn’t yet a neighborhood, or hadn’t been one for more than a century.  Wall Street was the world’s best-known business address, which meant lots of action during business hours but not much in the evenings or on weekends. Though 10,000 of us lived below Chambers Street, there was only one all-night diner, and forget about buying a quart of milk after hours.

But we loved life on the cusp of New York City’s past, present and future. No supermarket?  We lugged our groceries home on the subway.  No chic Saturday night bistro?  We dined in. No gift shop? We found great things at J&R, Century 21, Brooks Brothers, Dick’s Hardware and the Nassau Street specialty stores memorialized by Red Grooms in Ruckus Manhattan. The adventure was worth the challenge of being pioneers.

Slowly, then all of a sudden, things changed.  The Financial District remains a prime business address, but it has also become a hot residential neighborhood.  New restaurants and markets opened, and old ones expanded their hours. The past 10 years, especially, have brought a dizzying array of companies, merchants, schools and parks—and a new generation of people who call this part of Lower Manhattan home.  Nowhere is this more evident than on Wall Street itself, home to some of the world’s most prominent financial institutions but also to thousands of residents, more than a dozen new retailers and a museum.

In other words, Lower Manhattan has become a community, a place that hosted nine million visitors last year alone and where 309,000 people work and 56,000 live together. There is a powerful commonality of spirit and interest, the shared belief that, here in Lower Manhattan, Wall Street and Main Street are the same street.

This was obvious when the Community Board 1 Financial District Committee recently considered a proposal to open a methadone clinic on Maiden Lane.  The proponents must have been surprised to learn that 20,000 people live within four blocks of the proposed location and that there are four primary and elementary schools within the same radius. Led by Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, a group of property owners, small-business people and residents made the case that this is not your father’s week-day Wall Street but the heart of a 24/7 residential and commercial district. The application was withdrawn.

As Speaker Silver often says, Lower Manhattan is a great place to live, work and raise a family.  Nowhere is this truer than in the Financial District. No longer Manhattan’s post-modern frontier, Lower Manhattan gets better and better as more companies, more nonprofits, more entrepreneurs, more open space, more hotels, more restaurants, more stores and more people combine to make it New York City’s most dynamic place to work, live and visit.

Liz Berger is President of the Downtown Alliance

 

Lower Manhattan for the Holidays: Century 21

Tuesday, December 20th, 2011

Lower Manhattan is dressed up for the holidays. Photographer Jeremy Patlen took a stroll through the district, and captures the holiday spirit through wonderful winter images. We’re posting one a day in the two weeks prior to Christmas. So enjoy!

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Let the Downtown Alliance be your one-stop holiday shopping resource. We can give you access to more than 1,300 places to shop, dine and explore in Lower Manhattan.

You can get this information in one of three ways:
•    Visit the Downtown Alliance website
•    Download our mobile app at iTunes (search for “Downtown NY”)
•    Order a free hard copy of the new Lower Manhattan Shopping and Dining Guide here.

Lower Manhattan Is Where I Want to Be for the Holidays

Wednesday, November 23rd, 2011
shooting stars

Downtown Alliance is launching holiday lights for the 2011 season.

By Liz Berger

The holiday season is one of my favorite times of year, a time to appreciate what’s really important in life: family, friends and community.

It’s a time when Lower Manhattan seems most like a little village, with decorative lights glowing warmly from lampposts on cobblestone streets, and great festive trees brightening City Hall Park, the South Street Seaport, the Stock Exchange and countless building lobbies. I love how Lower Manhattan, the city’s oldest neighborhood, seems to harken back to an earlier era, from Stone Street to Front Street to Trinity Church. And, I love how our one square mile has everything we need.

It’s a time to think about all we’ve been through together, all the places we’re going, and the enormous changes that are making our community stronger and even more dynamic. It’s a time to bake cookies for neighbors, nod to the college students who now call Lower Manhattan home and bundle up for a stroll to the water’s edge. It’s a time to meet old friends for hot chocolate, at La Maison du Chocolat or Financier, stop in for a snack at Crepes du Nord or Takahachi Bakery, or use the Downtown Connection to window shop from Front Street to Warren Street and every street in between.

The holidays are a time to take time—to enjoy old favorites, like The Nutcracker at the World Financial Center, The Messiah at Trinity Church, the Family Hanukkah Celebration at the Museum of Jewish Heritage and the Victorian Celebration in the British Garden at Hanover Square, or to start a new holiday tradition with a visit to the National Museum of the American Indian at Bowling Green or the Ellis Island Immigration Museum in New York Harbor.

It’s a time for good cheer—even if the national economy is giving us precious little to cheer about—and a time for presents, small or large, store-bought or homemade. This year, two of Lower Manhattan’s signature retailers are celebrating milestone anniversaries: 50 years in Lower Manhattan for Century 21 Department Stores and 40 years for J&R Music and Computer World. At the same time, T.J. Maxx has opened a brand-new store at 14 Wall Street. That gives Lower Manhattan more than 625 places where shoppers can find the perfect gift, from My.Suit on Broad Street to the World Trade Art Gallery on Trinity Place.

It’s a time for old and new—for exploring restaurants and retailers that have opened in the past year, and for going back to time-honored favorites. And, it’s a time to invite friends and family to see what Lower Manhattan has to offer, perhaps with a stay at one of our 18 hotels.

This year, the Downtown Alliance is making it easy to take advantage of all of Lower Manhattan’s attractions. We’re releasing a new shopping and dining guide, we’ve expanded our mobile phone app, and we’re constantly updating the event calendar and searchable map on our new website at www.DowntownNY.com—all in time for your holiday plans.

Meanwhile, the Downtown Alliance joins City Hall in supporting Small Business Saturday on November 26. American Express cardholders who shop at independently owned small businesses can get $25 off their next credit card statement. For more information, go to www.smallbusinesssaturday.com.

The numbers tell the story. With 56,000 residents, 309,000 workers, and nine million annual visitors, Lower Manhattan is where everyone wants to be—every day, in every season. But home is where the heart is, and during the holidays, Lower Manhattan is more compelling than ever. It’s where I want to be.

Liz Berger is President of the Downtown Alliance.

A Night on the Town Starts Downtown

Friday, August 28th, 2009

image_mariaI’m going out with the girls after work. That may sound easy enough, except that a look in the ladies room mirror – with my summer casual Friday outfit staring back at me accusingly – has me rethinking this morning’s wardrobe choice. It was good enough for the office, but I wouldn’t be caught dead at a lounge in this stuffy getup.

Something as simple as going out with girlfriends is actually a test. I’m convinced that whichever friend (or culprit if you prefer) is sending out these spontaneous invitations does so only after an 8-point mirror inspection, during which she’s deemed herself ready to make her Friday night social appearance. It takes a lot of work look as though I put very little thought into my fashionable attire. Fortunately, I have everything I need to keep up this masquerade within flip-flop walking distance.

Although I have the option of popping into Sephora on Broadway at Liberty Street to take care of the beautifying portion of this program, their facial technicians put makeup on half of your face, and show you how to do the other half yourself. Can anyone say “train wreck?” Being that I need to show full frontal eye shadow, I’m off to Century 21 Department Store on Dey Street to buy what I need and take a crack at applying my own makeup.

I can walk in through the ladies make-up department to pick up lipstick, foundation, plaster, etc. – whatever it takes to achieve a natural, barely there look. Actually, everything I need is at Century 21. My plan of action calls for a trip up to the 3rd floor Womenswear department, followed by a plunge into a sea of high heels in Ladies Shoes, and a trek back into the Handbags section for a cute clutch.

Alas, I am not equipped with camouflage gear and combat boots, so going deeper into Century 21 midday during tourist season may not have been the best course of action. But easy is boring, so I accept my self-imposed challenge to see how many more errands I can cram into the rest of my lunch hour. Off to Nassau Street I go!

I venture over to get my eyebrows threaded. Reena is a facial hair artist, and I am thankful for both the artistry and air conditioning that Perfect Eyes at 93-97 Nassau Street has to offer. For $6 you can reconstruct your eyebrows and take years off of your lids. Now I look 25…er, 35? Whatever I can get away with.

The pain subsides, and I’m off to De Janiero, Dor LDor, and Know Style near John Street to find some wardrobe contenders. I fought the urge to run into Nine West on Broadway because I know that De Janiero also has a shoe store across the street from its clothing store.

I’m done shopping, and now all I have to do is wait for my workday to end so I can start putting myself together. A glance at my feet while changing into my new shoes reveals that my flip-flops have taken quite the beating, and so have my toes. My final stop is Salon 25 on John Street for a mani-pedi. My one fear is that their pedicure stations are so comfortable that I might just fall asleep and miss what I’ve worked so hard to look effortless for – my night out on the town.