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  1. Dec 9, 2012 · You are free: to share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work; to remix – to adapt the work; Under the following conditions: attribution – You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made.

  2. The bi-level design of Sutton Place Park includes a sandbox and playground equipment, as well as breathtaking views of the Queensboro Bridge. The park and its vistas of the Queensboro Bridge were featured prominently in Woody Allen’s Manhattan (1979). The park contains the Wild Boar statue, which is a replica of the bronze wild boar completed ...

  3. To the north of Turtle Bay is Sutton Place, to the west is Midtown, and to the south are Tudor City and Murray Hill. Turtle Bay Association. The Turtle Bay Association, a neighborhood non-profit 501(c)3 organization, was founded in 1957 by James Amster to protest, successfully, the widening of East 49th Street.

  4. 59th Street is a crosstown street in the New York City borough of Manhattan, running from York Avenue and Sutton Place on the East Side of Manhattan to the West Side Highway on the West Side. The three-block portion between Columbus Circle and Grand Army Plaza is known as Central Park South, since it forms the southern border of Central Park.

  5. Other information. Number of units. 487. Manhattan Place is a 35-story apartment building at 630 First Avenue in the Murray Hill neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City. Opened in 1984, it was one of the city's first high-rise condominiums and the first project in the city for which Costas Kondylis received credit as the design architect.

  6. Feb 26, 2018 · Sutton Place is a well-manicured, quiet enclave filled with captivating brownstones and pre-war buildings that has attracted high-profile residents including Marilyn Monroe and Arthur Miller, Freddie Mercury, Joan Crawford, and Sigourney Weaver. Its small stretch of streets dotted with trees and grand townhouses are just illustrations of what ...

  7. Sutton Place, the name that applied to the whole street at the time, was originally one of several disconnected stretches of Avenue A built where space allowed, east of First Avenue. In 1875, Effingham B. Sutton constructed a group of brownstones between 57th and 58th Streets, and is said [by whom?] to have lent the street his name, though the ...

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