Upper East Side|News|
CUNY Nursing School Stalls On UES As Funding Runs Dry: Report
City and state officials disagree on where money to build the new campus should come from.

City and state officials disagree on where money to build the new campus should come from.

A four-story building will give way for an apartment complex with 15 large units.

The city Landmarks Preservation Commission added the First Hungarian Reformed Church on East 69th Street to its landmarking calendar.
Townhouse sales in the last six months of 2018 were down 48 percent from the year before.
Developers have filed plans to build a new development on East 79th Street between First and Second avenues.
The local community board plans to fight the project, but the city and developers say it will raise money for much-needed NYCHA repairs.
The six-story apartment development will rise on a currently vacant lot on East 93rd Street.
The Church of the Epiphany will expand to Jan Hus Presbyterian Church and sell its current building to NewYork–Presbyterian Hospital.
Extell Development is behind the demolition of a six-story brick building on the corner of First Avenue and East 86th Street.
Fetner Properties is planning a 500-foot development with about 300 apartments on the campus of NYCHA's Holmes Towers.
The "Pulp Fiction" and "Avengers" star bought the East 63rd Street home in 2005 for $4.8 million.
Six buildings on York Avenue between East 85th and 86th streets will be bulldozed for a planned assisted living facility.
The home hit the market in November 2017 with an asking price of $39 million.
Developers behind a planned 800-foot residential tower will have to slow the pace of construction, the East River Fifties Alliance said.
Russian aluminum magnate Oleg Deripaska, who's been hit with federal sanctions, bought the East 64th Street home in 2008.
Roosevelt lived in the limestone townhouse until her death in 1962.
Six residents of the Carnegie Park apartment building on East 94th Street claim their condos have asbestos-containing materials.
The duplex apartment is located in a Park Avenue co-op called the "world's richest apartment building."
Scaffolding has enveloped First Avenue between East 80th and 79th streets as developers begin to demolish the entire block.
The East 82nd Street development will contain 21 apartments and space for a small medical facility.
The Board of Standards and Appeals ruled that a planned 800-foot residential tower should not be affected by a recently-passed rezoning.
Owners of the co-op operated the property like a for-profit rental, violating state laws and depriving tenants of rent stabilization.
The property is one of the most expensive New York City townhouses to change hands this year.
Roman Abramovich, who earned his multi-billion-dollar fortune in Russia's steel industry, is combining four East 74th Street townhouses.
The building will also feature ground-floor commercial space.
The healthcare company, which operates Lenox Hill Hospital, will build a new ambulatory care and cancer center on Third Avenue.
Developers that recently bought up half an Upper East Side block revealed their plans for the site.
The organization behind the New York City Marathon and other races used the building as a headquarters.
The six-building portfolio consists of low-rise mixed-use and residential buildings.
Building plans do not specify what kind of facility will occupy the new development.
The planned six-story building will replace an existing five-story building on East 81st Street.
The East 58th Street tower is the focal point in a battle between a community group and a developer.
The longtime news anchor was asking $8 million for her Park Avenue co-op.
The apartment building is leasing two- and three-bedroom units.
Ramona Singer of "Real Housewives of New York City" is selling her East 80th Street home.
A California-based developer backed out of a deal to buy out an Upper East Side couple's apartment and demanded they give it up for less.
Developers struck a deal with a neighborhood church to add development rights to a new block-swallowing building.
The new development will rise on Madison Avenue between East 79th and 80th streets.
Developers filed plans with the city to demolish every building on a stretch of First Avenue.
Community preservation groups claimed an "inter-building void" in the tower was excessive, but the city doesn't think so.