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Islip Terrace, New York

Census-designated places in New York (state)Census-designated places in Suffolk County, New YorkIslip (town), New YorkUse mdy dates from November 2023
Islip Terrace, NY on Approach to MacArthur Airport, June 3, 2018
Islip Terrace, NY on Approach to MacArthur Airport, June 3, 2018

Islip Terrace (formerly known as Germantown) is a hamlet and census-designated place (CDP) in the Town of Islip in Suffolk County, on the South Shore of Long Island, in New York, United States. The population was 5,389 at the 2010 census.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Islip Terrace, New York (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Islip Terrace, New York
Fairview Avenue,

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Wikipedia: Islip Terrace, New YorkContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 40.748611111111 ° E -73.186388888889 °
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Address

Fairview Avenue 78
11752
New York, United States
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Islip Terrace, NY on Approach to MacArthur Airport, June 3, 2018
Islip Terrace, NY on Approach to MacArthur Airport, June 3, 2018
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Nearby Places

Central Islip State Hospital Powerplant
Central Islip State Hospital Powerplant

The Central Islip State Hospital (CISH) Powerplant was constructed in 1953 by the Titusville Iron Works Co. and The Interboro Co. It was constructed to meet the rising electrical demands of the expanding psychiatric facility located in Central Islip, New York on Long Island. The Powerplant utilized 3 large turbine generators driven by steam created in 6 water tube boilers heated by coal, then eventually oil. Both fuels were delivered by freight train. The steam that spun the generators was then funneled through a system of pipes housed in underground cement corridors to the various buildings on the psychiatric grounds for district heating. The powerplant was known as Building number 101 and technically referred to as The Powerhouse. It was the last of 3 powerplants constructed on the psychiatric facility grounds and by far, the largest. In the mid-1970s, a World War II Sherman Tank was discovered buried south of the Powerplant.As deinstitutionalizing progressed across the United States and commercial powerplants on Long Island emerged, The CISH Powerplant was eventually relegated to the role of an electrical distribution hub for externally supplied electricity to the few remaining psychiatric buildings still in use. In 1996, The Central Islip State Hospital was closed down and the property and buildings were sold to New York Tech. New York Tech sold off the property on which the CISH Powerplant resided, and in 2006, it was demolished to make room for condominiums.