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Cypress Avenue East Historic District

Historic districts in New York CityHistoric districts in Queens, New YorkHistoric districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Queens, New YorkQueens County, New York Registered Historic Place stubsRidgewood, Queens
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Cypress Avenue East Historic District is a national historic district in Ridgewood, Queens, New York. It includes 247 contributing buildings built between 1900 and 1914. They consist mainly of three story tenements with two apartments per floor. They feature alternating facades of light and dark speckled brick.The district boundaries were drawn to exclude commercial and frame construction buildings, and include the following addresses: Linden Street 16-66 to 16-92 17-02 to 17-40 Cypress Avenue 654, 664 Gates Avenue 16-73 to 16-91 16-74 to 16-94 17-01 to 17-21 17-02 to 17-22 Palmetto Street 16-63 to 16-83 17-01 to 17-21 17-02 to 17-22 Woodbine Street 16-61 to 16-83 16-60/2? to 16-84 17-01 to 17-21 17-02 to 17-26 Seneca Avenue 652 to 668 784 to 790 802 to 816 Madison Street 17-01 to 17-25 17-10 to 17-28 Cornelia Street 17-19 to 17-33The district was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Cypress Avenue East Historic District (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Cypress Avenue East Historic District
Palmetto Street, New York Queens

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Latitude Longitude
N 40.701666666667 ° E -73.908611111111 °
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Palmetto Street 1702
11385 New York, Queens
New York, United States
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Famous Accountants

Famous Accountants is a contemporary art gallery located in Ridgewood, in the New York City borough of Queens, near the border with the Bushwick, Brooklyn. It was founded in October 2009 by artists Kevin Regan and Ellen Letcher, who opened the space to carry on the community spirit of Austin Thomas's closed Pocket Utopia gallery. The gallery is located in the basement of a building on Gates Avenue that was owned for nearly 15 years by performance artist Genesis P-Orridge., and her late partner, Lady Jaye Breyer P-Orridge. Lady Jaye used the same space as her studio for many years, the only remnant being the number 23, used as the title of Famous Accountants' first exhibition, 23, 2009. In a profile in The New York Times, P-Orridge claimed that she was "forced out [of the neighborhood] by the hipsters" and that she would relocate to the Lower East Side.The gallery has drawn attention for its exhibitions featuring a broad range of materials and working methods, including both artist William Pappenheimer's curatorial project Tunneling, 2010, which surveyed new media and Matthew Miller's self-portraits painted using traditional methods from the Northern Renaissance. In January 2011 the gallery exhibited an installation by artist Andrew Ohanesian of an airplane jetway that the artist had built from new and discarded parts he sourced himself.Artist William Powhida praised the inclusiveness of the Ridgewood / Bushwick artist community of which the gallery is a part, saying, “You can still have a BBQ outside of English Kills and host Sunday salons at Famous Accountants... Do you ever see that in Chelsea? Not so much.”

Academy of Urban Planning
Academy of Urban Planning

Academy of Urban Planning (AUP) is a small public high school in Brooklyn, New York on the campus of Bushwick High School. It shares a building with Academy of Environmental Leadership, Bushwick School for Social Justice, and New York Harbor School. It was established in 2003 as a partnership between the New York City Department of Education and New Visions for Public Schools, a nonprofit organization promoting educational reform. Funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, New Visions transformed failing New York City high schools into smaller, more specialized learning communities. AUP was founded by parents, teachers, students and staff from the school's lead partner, Center for the Urban Environment.As of the 2014–15 school year, the school had 280 students and 21.8 classroom teachers (on an FTE basis), for a student–teacher ratio of 12.8:1. 267 students (95.4% of enrollment) were eligible for free lunch and 8 (2.9% of students) for reduced-cost lunch.Through the school's theme of urban planning, students take a sequence of courses including art, architecture and urban design, urban sociology, Geographic Information Systems and a senior seminar in democracy and leadership. The school also offers advanced placement courses in English literature, statistics, human geography and Latino studies. AUP offers students the opportunity to participate in the arts, community service, mentoring, college planning and community advocacy. AUP has been featured in local and national media including MTV's Thinkover Your School, US News and World Report, New York Daily News, Newsday, The Bushwick Observer, EL Diario and News 12. In 2005, AUP received the William H. T. Whyte award for innovation in urban planning. AUP students' work has been exhibited at the Municipal Art Society and the Brooklyn Historical Society.