Posts Tagged ‘stone street’

A Video Tour of Our New Wi-Fi Corridor

Thursday, February 2nd, 2012

A couple of months ago, I once again had the fortune of climbing up to the roof of another building in Lower Manhattan, this time at 84 William Street. The plan was to place Wi-Fi access points on the top of the roof pointing down. But when we got up there, it was clear that wasn’t going to work because the building is so steep that no one would be able to use the Wi-Fi on the ground.

Plan B involved working with Taz, the retailer on the building’s ground floor; they were very happy to work with us, fortunately. This means we are proud to announce the creation of three more spaces where you can enjoy Wi-Fi in our neighborhood: Louise Nevelson Plaza (the little island between William Street, Maiden Lane and Liberty Street),  59 Maiden Lane (in front of Zeytuna’s and catty-corner to Louise Nevelson), and at the Churchyard at Trinity Church on Broadway.

But that’s not all we’ve done!

We’ve created the first Wi-Fi corridor in Lower Manhattan! At 168,000 square feet, it runs from the top of the British Memorial Garden all the way down Stone Street and into the plaza area south of Stone Street. It even covers some of Coenties Slip to Water Street, extending to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Plaza across the street.

Check out my guided tour (though, it was really windy, so don’t turn your volume up too high).

I’m sure given our warmer weather this winter you’d like to head outside already. In a few short months, it will be warm all the time and we will have several new areas to enjoy free Wi-Fi outside in the great district of Lower Manhattan.

If you want more details on the WiFi program, click here.

Meet a Lower Manhattan Business: The Growler Bites & Brews

Thursday, January 5th, 2012

Introducing The Growler Bites & Brews, the latest addition to Stone Street’s historic drinking and dining scene. The Growler is a rustic American tavern featuring great craft beer, artisanal hot dogs, sausage and sandwiches, and tasty signature cocktails (the cocktail menu features canine-inspired concoctions such as the Golden Retriever, the Great Dane, and the Bloodhound).

In addition to an extensive beer menu, The Growler has a great selection of “bites” including Brooklyn-made hot dogs with all the toppings any dog-lover could want.

The Growler’s house beers, Growler Brrright and Growler Darrrk, come from local breweries and are brewed exclusively for The Growler. Can’t get enough at the bar? All beers are available in growlers (64 oz beer jugs), to drink at the bar or take home.

At its heart, The Growler is a tribute to dogs. The law requires your pooch to hang outside but The Growler has water bowls and treats that will make your dog give it two barks up!

The Growler Bites & Brews

55 Stone Street

(917) 409-0251

www.thegrowlernyc.com

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.

Wi-Fi Meandering Part II

Tuesday, July 19th, 2011

Downtown Alliance Free Wi-Fi Network
This is the second part of my Wi-Fi meandering to check out the status of our Wi-Fi hotspots and to make sure they were all in good shape. Feel free to check out the Flickr set I created

When you last saw me meandering (not wandering as some people thought!), we were at the Elevated Acre at 55 Water Street.

After confirming that the signal was working great at the spot (which is being sent from our access points on the 14th floor), we went down the escalators onto Water Street, crossed the block, and cut under 7 Hanover Square (I really enjoy getting the chance to walk through buildings like that) just north of Coenties Slip, and emerged on Pearl Street.

We turned left, then right, and landed on Stone Street. Not to toot our own horn, but according to Wikipedia, “a joint partnership between the Landmarks Commission and other city agencies, the Alliance for Downtown New York and Stone Street owners has transformed Stone Street from a derelict back alley into one of Downtown’s liveliest scenes.”

Pat on the back, please!

Currently, one of the retailers on Stone Street has allowed us to transmit a Wi-Fi signal from one of its second-floor windows. We’d love to extend Wi-Fi further onto Coenties Alley, the area south of Stone and across from Coenties Slip, and we’re exploring ways to do that, and are reaching out to neighboring businesses.

Otherwise, Stone Street’s Wi-Fi was in good shape. So we headed north to the nearby British Garden at Hanover Square, which was a tranquil spot newly gleaming just after a hosing down. I’ve lunched there a couple of times in the past two weeks, and it’s just so lovely. (If you didn’t know, the garden was created to honor the 67 British subjects who died on September 11th.)

Wi-Fi was working wonderfully here, as well (it’s transmitted from one of the retailers bordering the park), so we ventured east to the South Street Seaport. We walked up to Wall Street, turned right, walked up South Street (which was called South Street not because it was on the east side, but because when our ancestors first settled on this island, this is the spot where the ships came in from which they perceived was the south, or bottom, of the island.)

The Seaport is probably the largest Wi-Fi hotspot we have because it’s both indoors – with access points in the food court area – as well as outdoors; our equipment is positioned outside, sending the signal from the food court all the way to South Street.

While testing it, we grabbed lunch in the food court and then readied to move onto 60 Wall Street, known as the Atrium. We walked along Fulton Street (I’ve always wanted to get Wi-Fi in that enormous shopping plaza area, an idea for the future), down Pearl Street, and turned right onto Pine Street until we reached the 60 Wall Atrium.

As always there were quite a few people there, snacking away, hunched over their smartphones, iPads, and laptops, working away. It was obvious the Wi-Fi was working – and our testing backed that up (although that is one of our most frustrating hotspots because the Verizon line there is often subpar).

Essentially, we actually installed a device (you can’t see it, but it’s with our access points, which are hidden at each end of the Atrium) that can tell when the line has gone bad and reboot the router to try and find the signal again so that the intermittent service we receive via Verizon doesn’t too negatively affect our Wi-Fi users.

Instead of experiencing a hotspot that is completely down, some of our users end up experiencing up and down service, not as reliable as we expect from our hotspots. We are working with Verizon to replace some of the bad equipment installed there, and hopefully that will make a difference.

After 60 Wall, we headed to City Hall via Broadway, passing construction of the new Fulton Street Transit Center, which is expected to be an incredible transportation hub, beautifying the area and allowing light into the some of the underground tunnels, but also combining (or what they call a “rationalization” of) the 84,000 subway stations in Lower Manhattan. Okay, maybe it’s not 84,000, but it is a lot.

These days, the first thing that greets you as you enter City Hall Park from the south is “Splotch,” a sculpture by Sol LeWitt.

Personally, while I am no art expert (though I am married to one), I think it is beautiful because the color is vibrant and exciting, making this really cool park even more beautiful. There are other sculptures around as well, but this one really grabbed my attention, and I had a hard time resisting the urge to linger any longer.

But back to our mission. So, in the past, we’ve had some Wi-Fi performance issues at City Hall Park because we’re actually shooting the signal from atop one of the nearby buildings, and in the Summer, the trees become so thick that the leaves actually block the signal (that is definitely not an indoor problem!). Fortunately, it was working just fine during our site visit.

And I will stop here, maybe to just check out that sculpture again, and fill you in on the final three hotspots in my next installment.

A New Grace Note on Stone Street: The Dazzler Arrives

Friday, June 17th, 2011
President Elizabeth H. Berger stands in front of “The Dazzler” on Stone Street with four Downtown Alliance workers at the Pop-Up Pianos launch event. For more pictures of the event, visit the Alliance’s Flickr.

Downtown Alliance President Elizabeth Berger in front of “The Dazzler” on Stone Street with Downtown Alliance public safety officers at the Pop-Up Pianos launch.

A walk around Lower Manhattan often  ends with a relaxing drink or al fresco dining, but good music was on the Stone Street menu Thursday morning with the launch of the Pop-Up Pianos project.

The public art project, headed by Sing for Hope’s co-founding directors Camille Zamora and Monica Yunus, will bring 88 pianos–up from last year’s 60–to parks and public spaces across the five boroughs of New York City.

The pianos are available for anyone to play, and Downtown Alliance President Elizabeth H. Berger did just that at the launch event.

The New York City Housing Authority Youth Chorus made a special appearance as well, gathering around “The Dazzler” and spreading the joy.

The pianos will be available to the public from Saturday, June 18 to Saturday, July 2. Then they will be donated to local schools, hospitals, and community organizations where they will continue to spread the music. For more pictures, click here.

"Stone" Cold

Wednesday, February 9th, 2011

brianstonest

While my fingers nearly fell off this afternoon it was nice to finally take some photographs with sunlight. The outdoor area of Stone Street, usually bustling with the lunchtime crowd, grows dormant in winter. Don’t worry, though; all the restaurants are open and usually crowded inside!

Downtown’s Newest Dining Room

Thursday, August 12th, 2010
DOT Commissioner Janette Sadik-Khan, owners of Bombay's and Fika, and Nicole LaRusso of the Downtown Alliance officially opened the pop-up cafe Thursday.

DOT Commissioner Janette Sadik-Khan, owners of Bombay's and Fika, and Nicole LaRusso of the Downtown Alliance officially opened the pop-up cafe Thursday.

Midtown may have Pop-Tarts, but Downtown has a pop-up.

Just in time for refreshing fall weather, the New York City Department of Transportation has created an innovative, pleasant place to sit outside in Lower Manhattan on Pearl Street, called a “pop-up café.” It’s a temporary curbside seating platform and the first of its kind in New York City.

While anyone can enjoy the space, the platform was installed by adjacent restaurants Fika and Bombay’s, which will maintain and remove the platform later this year at their own expense. The program’s effectiveness will be evaluated to help determine if similar spaces should be created elsewhere in the city.

“As we know from the success of Stone Street, the addition of outdoor seating creates an exciting new destination for Downtown’s 300,000 workers, 55,000 residents and six million annual visitors,” said Downtown Alliance President Elizabeth H. Berger. “The Department of Transportation’s new pop-up café platform is an especially creative way to add seating along a street with narrow sidewalks. We hope everyone will come enjoy this great new addition to the neighborhood.”

Today, Downtown Alliance Senior Vice President for Planning and Economic Development Nicole LaRusso joined DOT Commissioner Janette Sadik-Khan, Department of Consumer Affairs Commissioner Jonathan Mintz and Community Board 1 Financial District Chairman Ro Sheffe at a news conference to officially unveil the space. Also making an appearance was cycling enthusiast and former Talking Heads band member David Bryne, who recently worked with DOT to design and select whimsical new bike racks.

Many of the nearby tables were filled as the restaurants handed out mango lassi, samosas and a selection of Swedish hors d’oeuvres to celebrate the unveiling.

Click here to view photos from the event. And here’s a YouTube clip of the space.

Both restaurants had approached the Downtown Alliance and DOT earlier this year about ways they could possibly expand onto the sidewalk, which was too narrow for a café according to Consumer Affairs rules. DOT and DCA discussed this innovative solution and DOT proposed the pop-up café platform concept to be installed in the roadbed in the businesses’ loading zones. The 84-foot-long, 6-foot-wide wooden platform is landscaped with planters, wire railing and furnished with 14 café tables and 45 chairs.

One week into the project, Fika and Bombay’s have already reported huge increases in business. Perhaps samosas and gravlax are best taken in the shadow of Downtown skyscrapers.

Are you the next Ben Folds or Billy Joel?

Monday, June 21st, 2010

Sing for Hope Piano on Coenties Alley at Stone Street

If you want to tickle the ivories during your lunch break – or during any daylight hours – here’s your chance to kick back and impress your friends. A piano now sits at Coenties Alley at the foot of Stone Street until July 5th as part of the Sing for Hope program; 59 others are spread out across the city as well. If you happen to have any photos or video, send us your best ones at ContactUs@DowntownNY.com and we may be able to show off your musical prowess.

Celebrating Downtown

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

Pizza

Every year, on the first Saturday after the New Year, I gather my friends for a dinner.  Not to celebrate times past, or the start of something new, but to celebrate what is truly most important to me… me.  My birthday is on the 4th of January, and for the past few years (as more and more people travel farther and farther for the holidays) it always seems like a good idea to gather returned and weary travelers in one place and toast Me… ok, mostly we celebrate the end of the holidays, but let me have my illusions.

In years past I have held the dinners in TriBeca, Greenwich Village and the Upper West Side.  But this year, after close to a year working at The Downtown Alliance, I thought I would introduce my friends to a little strip known as Stone Street.

Adrienne’s Pizza Bar had just the atmosphere I was looking for, and after some simple negotiations with management they set up an amazing deal for my guests.  For a very reasonable price per head my entire party had two hours of endless wine, beer and mixed drinks, antipasti and salad, and enough artisan pizza to feed an army.

Most of my guests had never been to Stone Street (let alone Adrienne’s) and many got lost along the way!  But I was so pleased to hear from many of them, “Thank God there are those Way Finding signs all over the place, they saved the night!” How proud was I to tell them that the Downtown Alliance put those up for just such an occasion!

It was a cold night, and my guests were NOT interested in traveling very far after our dinner.  Again, Stone Street provided.  Right next door to Adrienne’s is Ulysses’, a well known neighborhood haunt.  And though Stone Street was deserted because of the cold, the bar was full of Downtowners listening to live music and reconnecting after the holiday.

Once warmed up inside the Jameson began to flow, and I’m afraid the rest of the story is for privileged ears only.  But suffice it to say, my guests will all be returning to Stone Street and Lower Manhattan on their own to find some of the other gems that are only just being discovered by the rest of the island.

Vintry Wine & Whisky: Something Different Downtown

Monday, December 14th, 2009

Boite is a New York Times Sunday Styles column about hip nightlife, the “in” spots of New York, Miami, Los Angeles and other cities.

On a recent Thursday evening, Leanne Shear was reporting the latest installment of the column at the hand-carved wooden bar of Vintry, a newly opened Stone Street wine, whisky and small plates bar and restaurant.

“This place is great,” Shear said. “I pitched my editors and they loved the idea of doing a Downtown spot.”

Along the bar, servers swooped in to pour wine (80 are available by the glass) and make robust Manhattans. The place was standing room only. But those without chairs proved it is possible to eat moist and flavorful veal meatballs, house-marinated olives and pleasantly different salmon knishes standing up.

“We wanted a change of pace, something new” said Peter Poulakakos, who owns Vintry and nine other bars and restaurants in Lower Manhattan. “So far, business has been great.”

As The Times’ cameraman darted between customers, stylish retro soul played at a comfortable level. When Shear’s column appears, New York will be introduced to Vintry. But by the look of things, word is already spreading.