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33rd Street station (PATH)

PATH stations in ManhattanRailway stations in the United States opened in 1910Railway stations located underground in New York (state)Sixth AvenueUse mdy dates from February 2019
PATH 33 Street turnstiles vc
PATH 33 Street turnstiles vc

33rd Street is a terminal station on the PATH system. Located at the intersection of 32nd Street and Sixth Avenue (Avenue of the Americas) in the Herald Square neighborhood of Midtown Manhattan, New York City, it is served by the Hoboken–33rd Street and Journal Square–33rd Street lines on weekdays, and by the Journal Square–33rd Street (via Hoboken) line on late nights, weekends and holidays. 33rd Street serves as the northern terminus of all three lines.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article 33rd Street station (PATH) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

33rd Street station (PATH)
6th Avenue, New York Manhattan

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: 33rd Street station (PATH)Continue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 40.749111 ° E -73.98824 °
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Address

34th Street–Herald Square

6th Avenue
10120 New York, Manhattan
New York, United States
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PATH 33 Street turnstiles vc
PATH 33 Street turnstiles vc
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Nearby Places

Million Dollar Corner
Million Dollar Corner

The Million Dollar Corner is a small plot of property next to Macy's Herald Square at 1313 Broadway, at the corner with 34th Street, in Herald Square, Manhattan, New York City. On December 6, 1911, the five-story building sold for a then-record $1 million (equivalent to $29.1 million in 2021).The building had been purchased by Robert H. Smith in 1900 for $375,000 (equivalent to $12.2 million in 2021). The idea had been to keep Macy's, which had announced plans to start construction on the block in 1901, from becoming the largest store in the world. It is largely supposed that Smith, who was a neighbor of the Macy's store on 14th Street, was acting on behalf of Siegel-Cooper, which had built what they thought was the world's largest store on Sixth Avenue in 1896. Macy's ignored the tactic and built around the building, but later struck a deal whereby the building began to carry a large Macy's billboard, generally a "shopping bag" sign (proclaiming Macy's the "world's largest store"), by lease arrangement.In September 2021, Macy's accused the billboard's owner Kaufman Realty of negotiating to lease the space to an online retailer before Macy's most recent lease expired that August. Macy's claimed that the lessee was almost certainly Amazon and filed for an injunction preventing Kaufman from leasing the space to a competitor. Macy's claimed that a 1963 agreement prohibited such a lease "forever" and that an Amazon billboard would be highly visible during the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade. Kaufman denied that it had communicated with Amazon but did not otherwise dispute the claim it was trying to lease the space to a Macy's competitor.