View allAll Photos Tagged eastharlem
Blade sign for E. Kosches & Son furniture store on 3rd Avenue in East Harlem. Kosches was in business from 1888 until 2006. This photo is from 2007. NY Neon has a similar photo on their blog and a couple of Kosches family members chimed in with comments.
Completed before 1910 in Germany, Walter Schott's Three Dancing Maidens depicts a circle of three young women whose dresses cling to their wet bodies as if they were perpetually in the fountain's spray.
Placed in Park: 1947 (built before 1910)
Police secure scene near 125th St. Metro-North station following a building collapse at 116th St. and Park Ave. in East Harlem. Photo: Metropolitan Transportation Authority / J.P. Chan
Restaurant 'La Fonda Boricua' on East 106th Street in East Harlem
Restaurant 'La Fonda Boricua' in der East 106th Street in East Harlem
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Crews clear debris on Metro-North tracks adjacent to scene of a building collapse at 116th St. and Park Ave. in East Harlem. Photo: Metropolitan Transportation Authority / Patrick Cashin
FDNY at 116th St. and Madison Ave. following a building collapse at 116th St. and Park Ave. in East Harlem. Photo: Metropolitan Transportation Authority / J.P. Chan
Crews clear debris on Metro-North tracks adjacent to scene of a building collapse at 116th St. and Park Ave. in East Harlem. Photo: Metropolitan Transportation Authority / Patrick Cashin
Crews clear debris on Metro-North tracks adjacent to scene of a building collapse at 116th St. and Park Ave. in East Harlem. Photo: Metropolitan Transportation Authority / Patrick Cashin
A portion of window frame to the Hope Community center building, a progressive and once thiving force in the Spanish Harlem community.
Nail salon sign on Lexington Ave in East Harlem. As far as I can tell the salon closed about ten years ago.
Harlem – 125th Street is a Metro-North commuter rail station serving the Hudson, Harlem and New Haven lines. There has been a railway station on this site since 1844.
Yes, this new building at 117th and 2nd Ave is pretentiously named "The Michael". Too bad the building is not large enough to house a craft store named Michael's at The Michael.
The Michael replaces this one story building which had a great Mexican mural on the 117th Street side.