RXR Realty LLC has closed on its $1.65 billion purchase of 1285 Sixth Ave. and signed a long-term lease renewal with the Manhattan office tower’s largest tenant, UBS Group AG.
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The waterfront community on Long Island’s North Shore is attracting new residents but retaining the old.
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The Four Seasons is preparing to end its half-century run in Manhattan’s Seagram Building by mid-July, but its co-owners aren’t done with the restaurant business just yet.
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Feedback Friday is where you can find out what issues matter to your fellow New Yorkers. This week: the struggling Yankees, an anti-litter incentive and the art of debate—at Rikers Island.
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The squeeze on New York City’s middle class has been going on for decades, and a new report shows the pressures these earners face today. Two Manhattan neighborhoods provide a glimpse of how the city might look if the affluent take over entirely.
The Yankees’ ace has been excellent when pitching on five days’ rest and terrible on the typical four days’ rest. The same problem has plagued many Japanese pitchers in the U.S., but Tanaka says it’s not what’s troubling him.
For one: Will the 53-year-old Hornacek, the former All-Star guard and Phoenix Suns coach, have enough autonomy to buck Phil Jackson’s triangle offense and design a new system in New York?
As CC Sabathia prepares to come off the disabled list Friday after missing more than two weeks with a groin strain, the Yankees need him more than ever.
If football’s oddsmakers are correct, the Jets will have to work extra hard to succeed this coming season, as their schedule will be the league’s second hardest. The Giants, meanwhile, are projected to have the second-easiest schedule.
Rooftop Films opens its 20th season this week, with many of its programs reflecting on ways in which New York has evolved since it mounted its first screens on an East Village rooftop in 1996.
A documentary offers an intimate look at the colorfully checkered career of one of New York’s most notorious pols.
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David Hare’s play about Oscar Wilde doesn’t shy away from pointing out the writer’s own culpability in his fall from grace.
The owners of this three-bedroom townhouse in the Bushwick section of Brooklyn transformed the property into a light-filled oasis, complete with a roof deck and vast studio space.



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Morley Safer, one of the best-known American television journalists of the past five decades, died Thursday at his home in Manhattan, his employer, CBS News, said. He was 84.
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The Riverkeeper’s 50th Anniversary Fishermen’s Ball honors Leonardo DiCaprio, Robert De Niro, Ralph Lauren and Howard A. Rubin, plus Jane Holzer at the Bruce High Quality Foundation benefit.
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Tuesday’s Whitney Gala, presented by Louis Vuitton, brought trustees, artists, fashion designers, venture capitalists and gallerists out to celebrate a year at the new Renzo Piano space.
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Big cities across the U.S. are seeing their postrecession population surge slow as Americans uproot for new jobs and suburbs regain some of their appeal.
You have to get in tune with nature, says Heather Wolf, Brooklynite and author of ‘Birding at the Bridge.’
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Photos of a home in Hoboken, N.J., that sold for $6.5 million, a record in the city.
Photos of the first meeting of the Gracie Book Club
Ralph Gardner Jr. joins Central Park’s first administrator and founding president of the Central Park Conservancy on a walk through the famed New York City park.
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As the prolific maker of dance nears 60, a look at some of his work.
The New York Botanical Garden’s new exhibition interprets gardens that inspired Impressionist painters at the turn of the 20th century.
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The sculptor and art patron’s Greenwich Village studio and salon is being opened to the public.
Stunning high floor classic "8" in one of Central Park West's most prestigious prewar cooperatives. This...
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This beautiful 4,400 square-foot traditional is situated on a finely manicured one-acre property. Features...
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In a premier Sagaponack south location very close to the ocean on a quiet cul-de-sac, this newly completed...
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