Gaynor Doubles in Size with Early Childhood Center

By Sean Creamer

The Claremont Stables on West 89th Street served the Upper West Side for years, providing a means for city-dwellers to learn horseback riding. Now, the horses have long gone, but the building will still be used for education. Read more

Queen of Retail on the Art of the Real Estate Deal

By Vatisha Smith

Faith Hope Consolo, the self-proclaimed “Queen of Retail,” has been a dominant force in Upper West Side commercial/retail real estate for many years. Read more

Fashion Week’s Economic Boon

By Megan Bungeroth

While some residents gripe about the unfavorable ramifications of having Fashion Week in their backyard, there are benefits to the community for hosting the event. In August 2011, the Fordham Consulting Group and Fordham University Graduate School of Business released an economic impact study outlining the effects of Fashion Week on the immediate surrounding areas within a 10-block radius of Lincoln Center. Read more

Fashion Week Nightmare

Neighbors cry foul over takeover of neighborhood park

By Megan Bungeroth

For designers, buyers, reporters, photographers and clothes-conscious consumers the world over, Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week conjures images of the latest and greatest designs paraded around in a swirl of parties and publicity. For residents of the area surrounding Fashion Week’s Lincoln Center home, however, the event conjures headaches, concerns over safety and anger over limited access to a public park. Read more

The Five Ugliest Buildings on the Upper West Side

We took your suggestions and came up with the Upper West Side’s worst eyesores

By Megan Bungeroth and Anam Baig

Every neighborhood has a few. Even on the generally well-maintained Upper West Side, some buildings, whether from construction, neglect or outright abandonment, cause neighbors to flinch when they see them. We asked local residents and community leaders to spot the worst eyesores in the neighborhood. Read more

Solemn Reminder at Park East Synagogue

U.N. Secretary General, among many, pay respects at Holocaust Remembrance Day

By Anam Baig

The U.N. International Holocaust Commemoration Sabbath took place Saturday, Jan. 21 at the Park East Synagogue, where the year’s first snowfall marked the memory of the six million who lost their lives during the Holocaust. Read more

Albany Looks to Diversify Stuy

By Megan Bungeroth

Last May, the West Side Spirit partnered with the Amsterdam News for a special investigation of the Discovery Program, an initiative that had fallen by the wayside of the education system but was intended to increase the substantially low diversity levels at the city’s specialized high schools. Now, citing that investigation as part of his reasoning, Brooklyn Assembly Member Karim Camara will introduce new legislation to address the schools’ admissions criteria, which he says are unfairly biased and don’t account for students who may not be good test takers but are otherwise up to the rigorous academic standards the schools require. Read more

Winter’s Grip Doesn’t Deter West Side Hummingbird

By Jesse Greenspan

Birdwatchers have been flocking to the American Museum of Natural History—not for the exhibits inside, but to view a rare rufous hummingbird that is living on the museum’s grounds. Read more

At Léman Prep, Critical Thinking is Key

Pre-K through 12th grade immerses students in globally charged curriculum

By Anam Baig

Léman Manhattan Preparatory School, part of the Meritas group of international private and boarding college prep schools, promises a dynamic, culturally aware education for all of its pre-kindergarten through high school students.
Formerly known as Claremont Preparatory School, it was acquired by the Meritas Family of Schools, a conglomerate of prep schools, last April. It was renamed Léman Manhattan Preparatory School after its sister schools, Collège du Léman in Switzerland and Léman International School in Chengdu, China. Read more

Oh, Say Can You See The Met’s New American Wing

By Anam Baig

American art has made a comeback at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The third and final phase of the museum’s 10-year, $100 million project is complete, and 26 newly designed galleries will be opened to the public this Monday.
First opened in 1924, The Met’s American Wing originally only displayed decorative arts, such as furniture and silverware, through the medium of period rooms. In the 1930s, paintings started coming in, and by the 1980s, galleries were opened to display the paintings. Read more

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