A look back at the 433 Broadway, once home to a unique park and hexagonal bank.
SoHo Broadway History: Merry Melodies for Happy Holidays
SoHo Broadway Initiative: Get to know the crew that keeps our sidewalks clean
Looking up at SoHo Broadway’s ornate cast iron architecture can tell you a lot about our neighborhood-SoHo Broadway Community
SoHo Broadway History: A 1978 painting by May Stevens offers an entry point to the stories of SoHo’s women artists
SoHo Broadway History: Houdini’s origins can be traced to our district
SoHo Broadway History: Exploring the area’s 20th century history as a nexus of automotive service businesses
SoHo Broadway History: The late architect and developer played a key role in the transformation of SoHo into an artist community and historic district
SoHo Broadway History: Petrosino Square is small but packed with history and is one of the few public realm oases serving our district
SoHo Broadway History: Looking back on the stylistic origins of SoHo’s iconic architecture
ny-layered past lies behind the cast-iron facade of this SoHo building
SoHo Broadway History: 2004 subway art installation still resonates today
Dean & Deluca, the high-end food purveyor at the corner of Broadway and Prince Street, opened in 1973 as The Cheese Store at 120 Prince Street (between Greene and Wooster). In 1977, Giorgio DeLuca…
When you think of the SoHo Broadway streetscape, you think of cast iron, water towers, street lights and maybe even vault lights, but what about Belgian blocks?
Look up. Look way up! Although they may look like remnants from New York’s past, 99% of the water towers in SoHo, including those along SoHo Broadway, are still in use and they are still being manufactured locally by two New York City companies that fabricate and maintain these cherished gems from SoHo’s skyline.
Have you ever wondered why some buildings in SoHo have “HOLLOW SIDEWALK” or “VAULTED SIDEWALK” signs posted on their facades?
She is the founder of the SoHo Memory Project and a 2018 SoHo Broadway Initiative Cast Iron Partner Award Recipient. Get to know Yukie Ohta.
There are approximately 250 cast iron buildings in New York City, most of them in SoHo and mostly built from the mid-1800’s through the late 1800’s.
Have you noticed the subtle artwork that can be found along the Prince Street station’s walls?
Balthazar at 80 Spring Street (a.k.a. 524 Broadway) SoHo Broadway Community Keith McNally, the British restauranteur, opened Balthazar in 1997 when SoHo still had a slight patina of grunge left on it. This was especially true for the area east of Broadway, where Balthazar has been packing in crowds night after night for over two […]
If there is any place in SoHo that could be called a town square or a community center, it would be the Housing Works Bookstore Café at 126 Crosby Street (also known as the rear address of 594 Broadway).
Featured countless times in tourism and commercial photography and famously in the opening credits of the hit television show NYPD Blue, the DKNY billboard, one of the first to dot the outskirts of SoHo, became a quasi-New York City landmark.
Everyone who lives or works on the Broadway corridor knows where the Nike SoHo store is located. How could you miss it? But what about the Dancers’ Building? Where is that? Tucked away inside of 537-541 Broadway, the Dancers’ Building has been the home (and many continues today) to be the home of a number […]
SoHo Broadway Neighborhood
It all started with a skirt, hoop skirt to be exact.