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Year built: 1959
Purchase date: 07/03/2025
Purchase price: $11,009,125
Here's the design for the upcoming new building. I really like it
www.caliendoarchitects.com/project-gallery/31-05-astoria-...
History of the site:
After 40 years in business the Neptune Diner located in Astoria, Queens, NYC served its last meal on Sunday, July 29. 2024. The owners claimed they were not given a chance to renew their lease, because the property will soon be turned into a residential building.
Since 1983, The Katsihtis brothers have owned the building on Astoria Boulevard but not the land, which was sold in 2018 for over $10 million.
The brothers also had a 35-year lease which expired in 2019. But since then, they were not able to come to a long-term agreement with the landlord.
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But that's what Long Island City/Astoria needs is another apartment building. It's already so overbuilt, it's ridiculous. Yet they keep tearing them down and building new ones, many of which are luxury rentals. The neighborhood is losing its character to steel and glass.
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This photo is part of the overall album titled
Queens: 31-05 Astoria Blvd North - Before & After Construction
Part of the album titled
Lucent 33, 37-24 33rd St - Before & After Construction
(click to view the entire album)
After almost an entire year, this project is starting up again thanks to new funding
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8:00 am on June 30, 2025
Updated Design Revealed for 561-Unit Skyscraper at 30-25 Queens Boulevard in Long Island City, Queens
newyorkyimby.com/2025/06/updated-design-revealed-for-561-...
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Part of the album:
30-25 Queens Blvd / 29-10 Northern Boulevard
(click to view the entire album)
Balconies going up, black netting coming down
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Part of the album
38-27 32nd St and 38-38 32nd St / Before & After Construction
(click to view the full album)
This video is included in the album titled Cinemagraphs & Videos (click to view that entire album)
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Part of the album titled: Self-Portraiture
Click to view the full album
They dismantled all of the sidewalk sheds, yet the green wall remains. Loving those black framed windows. Have always wanted an apartment with those types of windows. The ones where you need to wind a lever and they open sideways. In my fantasy it needs to be a red bricked building second floor apartment, and the building is situated on a tree lined street. Make that a cobblestone street. No, not a street. A lane. And it's raining. It's springtime...
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No clue what this building is supposed to be though it most certainly is not going not going to be another apartment building. Those steel rollup doors speak shops, though we shall see.
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Part of the album titled
37-12 31st Street / Before & After Construction
(click to view that entire album)
You may encounter many defeats, but you must not be defeated. In fact, it may be necessary to encounter the defeats, so you can know who you are, what you can rise from, how you can still come out of it.
~ Maya Angelou
(American memoirist, poet, singer, dancer, actress, and civil rights activist)
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Part of the album: Walk/Commute to/fro Work
Over the past year I have been taking this one same shot almost every weekday, mostly in the morning.
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This photo is part of the overall album titled
Thomson Avenue, Long Island City
Part of the album titled:
I hadn't seen any abandoned shoes for well over a month, and now twice in two days, and both sightings located very close to one another
This photo is included in the album titled
Beam me up Scotty. Forget the shoes
(click to view that entire album)
Part of the album titled:
38-15 Queens Boulevard / Before & After Construction
Click to view the full album
Crain's New York Business, March 7, 2024
Midtown-based Fisher Bros. has parted ways with a Long Island City site where it once hoped to build a 240-unit project.
The real estate firm has sold 42-50 24th St. to developer Chris Xu's United Construction & Development for $57.5 million, property records show. The deal will add to Xu's already substantial portfolio of Queens projects.
The Hakim Organization and Property Markets Group bought the site in 2015 for $69 million, and the real estate website New York YIMBY published renderings of a 74-story tower planned for the address in 2018. However, in 2019 Fisher Bros. prefiled plans for a 35-story project at the site that would span about 255,000 square feet with 240 residential units, 40,000 square feet of commercial space and a hotel.
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Read up on Willie Cole's 3,000 Buddha Chandelier project
Artist Willie Cole's website
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Part of the album titled
(click to view the entire album)
This is the beauty of street photography, as you never know what you'll stumble upon
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Included in the album titled
(click to view the entire album)
Part of the album
38-27 32nd St and 38-38 32nd St / Before & After Construction
(click to view the full album)
Mostly I prefer taking photos that are devoid of people, unless I need them to set scale or play off of lines & shapes in the image.
A tricky preference/maneuver in a city such as New York, though obviously not impossible.
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Part of the album titled
Manhattan: Midtown Northeast
(click to view the entire album)
This photo is included in the album titled: Big Bus New York
(click to view that entire album)
Included in the album titled:
This photo is part of an overall album titled
25-01 Queens Plaza North / Before-After Construction
(click to view that entire album)
Built in 1931, 4 floors, 20 units
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Thankfully it's situated 3-doors away from a Firehouse. But still. My neighborhood is super hot Real Estate wise, and a building like this, on a corner, could fetch 10-15 million. Let's see what happens.
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That's 28-08 28th St on the far left corner. Building Boom here
This cycle almost put me in the grave. As I hadn't known about how over time side effects become cumulative.
Not only that, what had happened was during Cycle # 3 on July 17th, the Neulasta Device had malfunctioned while I was at home. This medical device would be affixed to my upper arm at the end of each treatment, and it helped to stimulate the production of white blood cells, reducing the risk of infection. Meds from the device would be administered automatically 27-hours following treatment
On the evening of July 17th I began to notice how the device was detaching from my arm and required tape reinforcement. It activated July 18th though I experienced none of the typical side effects, suggesting improper medication delivery. You need to be your own advocate when you go through something like this, and you need to read everything, and stay on top of EVERY SINGLE THING.
As a result of the malfunction, my white blood cell (WBC) counts plummeted, and the following week I required two separate injections to bring them back up. On the morning of August 7th, prior to my scheduled 4th treatment, it was confirmed how my WBC counts were almost at their maximum counts.
I recalled how during my first Kemosabe session, a specific Infusion Nurse had secured the Neulasta Device with an additional bandage that had a clear window and provided better adhesion. On July 20th, I sent a message to my Oncologist mentioning how I would like to request that same application method moving forward.
Remember, BE YOUR OWN ADVOCATE
Also, I asked that their office please refrain from scheduling follow-up appointments immediately after my treatment sessions, as I'm too fatigued post-treatment to navigate additional appts, esp in different buildings. So stupid. I just can't understand that. Requested if they could please schedule follow-ups on separate days. Her staff may just not realize how exhausting chemo is.
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One needs to pay very close attention to every single aspect of it all. Especially when one lives alone
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Bought a second poncho in black
Forever the fashionista
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This photo is included in the album titled:
Newell's Run - Year of the City