Upper West Side|News|
9 Upper West Side Buildings Make NYC's Worst Landlords List
Here are the buildings on the Upper West Side that made the Public Advocate's annual Worst Landlords List.

Here are the buildings on the Upper West Side that made the Public Advocate's annual Worst Landlords List.

A stretch of the UWS has the fourth most drops in home prices of any New York City neighborhood last month, according to a new study.

No ZIP code had a bigger increase in the median home sale price during 2020 than one ZIP code on the UWS, according to a new report.
Sara Lind, a candidate for Helen Rosenthal's District 6 City Council seat, released a proposal Thursday to rezone parts of the UWS.
A study looking at home sales from March 13 to Sept. 7 identified the Upper West Side's 10069 as the second priciest ZIP code in NYC.
The Upper West Side ranked eighth in a recent study out of 30 NYC neighborhoods for the most significant drop in a one-bedroom rent price.
More and more discounts in upscale Manhattan neighborhoods amid the coronavirus crisis means a drop in rent prices is likely, a study found.
The Amsterdam Ave tower a judge ordered to cut its height shouldn't keep building as developers and the city appeal the decision, pols say.
The city is challenging a court ruling that ordered developers to shave already-built floors from a controversial Amsterdam Avenue tower.
Developers of a UWS tower that had its building permit revoked say the ruling creates a conundrum for 30 other buildings across the city.
Even with rent hikes, Upper West Siders will save more than $4,000 a year if they don't have to pay broker fees, a study found.
The Queen of Pop has an offer for Prince Harry and Meghan Markle.
The Riverside Church bell tower is reopening for the first time since 9/11.
The city will sell a vacant building to developer Fetner Properties in exchange for below-market housing units in the new development.
A lottery will be held to fill spots on the waiting list for below-market units at the West End Towers development.
Extell, currently fighting opposition to a project at another UWS site, is buying the New York Institute of Technology building on W 61st.
The city Board of Standards and Appeals sided with Extell Development over challenges to its planned West 66th Street tower.
Condo owners voiced frustration this summer that Trump's association with the building diminished the value of their homes.
Preservation groups and local elected officials have been fighting the Upper West Side's tallest development for years.
The 668-foot-talll luxury apartment development is the tallest building on the Upper West Side.
The previous owner filed plans to demolish portions of the Broadway and West 103rd Street building earlier this year.
The new Article 78 lawsuit argues that the Board of Standards and Appeals failed to properly re-evaluate building permits for the UWS tower.
The New York Institute of Technology is getting ready to offload its building on Broadway and West 61st Street.
The city Board of Standards and Appeals upheld its original ruling in favor of 200 Amsterdam Ave. developers.
A last-ditch effort to landmark the Shaare Zedek synagogue to block its redevelopment failed in 2017.
The Board of Standards and Appeals' 2018 ruling in favor of 200 Amsterdam Ave. developers was vacated in March by a state judge.
Many apartments in the West 82nd Street building are newly renovated.
The planned 668-foot tower at 200 Amsterdam is in the middle of a legal challenge brought by neighborhood preservationists.
The 18-story building will be located on the corner of Broadway and West 85th Street and contain 162 apartment units.
Extell Development's planned tower will rise 775-feet-tall on West 66th Street between Columbus Avenue and Central Park West.
Assembly Member Linda B. Rosenthal, State Senator Brian Benjamin and tenants make their voices heard as Albany considers rent control laws.
The planned 775-foot-tall tower was one of the inspirations for new city regulations against excess mechanical voids.
Politicians and community opponents of 200 Amsterdam rallied at the development site Tuesday to demand the city revoke construction permits.
Noise from a double-wide townhouse construction on West 69th Street has forced some neighbors to take up arms and others to flee.
The Supreme Court sided with a legal challenge against the UWS tower last month, but developers have been able to continue building.
Most of the iconic Midtown hotel is being redeveloped into condos. During construction, artifacts can be seen at the NY Historical Society.
A city Board of Standards and Appeals ruling in favor of 200 Amsterdam Avenue was vacated Thursday.
The city has punished Hank Fried for converting single-room-occupancy housing into an illegal hotel on Broadway and West 103rd Street.
City council members Mark Levine and Margaret Chin will introduce a resolution Thursday that backs bills currently in the state legislature.
Residents of 120 Riverside Boulevard have voted to remove "Trump Place" from the building's branding due to tanking home values.