Mayor Adams, Comptroller Lander, Partners Celebrate $60M Investment Preserving 35,000 Rental Units

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By NYC.gov NYC Mayor Eric Adams, NYC Comptroller Brad Lander, NYC Public Advocate Jumaane Williams, and trustees of the NYC Employees’ Retirement System made an announcement today. They announce an investment of up to $60 million to preserve rent-stabilized housing units impacted by the sudden collapse of Signature Bank last spring. The investment was made…

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* This article was originally published here

This gorgeous 7,500-square-foot street mural is now in Union Square

This gorgeous 7,500-square-foot street mural is now in Union Square

It’s always exciting when a piece of art becomes part and parcel of the city’s streets. Case in point: the mural installation that takes over Union Square every year.

"Flowing Together" in Union Square
Photograph: Jane Kratochvil

In 2024, the 7,500-square-foot mural unveiled in partnership with Union Square and the New York City Department of Transportation Art Program (NYC DOT Art) is the work of New York artist Talisa Almonte, who was selected among almost 30 total submissions received in 2024 only.

“Flowing Together,” as the piece is called, “recognizes [Union Square’s] legacy as an iconic space for people to come together, from all walks of life, in the name of self-expression – whether to make their voices heard or to celebrate life, joy, art, music and dance,” reads an official press release. 

Brightly multicolored, the mural abstractly showcases the flow of people into and out of the legendary neighborhood. More specifically, according to the release, “the southern portion of the street mural is filled with organic shapes of diverse colors, representing the constant flow of people passing through Union Square, while the northern portion showcases those same shapes joining into a spiral, representing the unification of people for a specific cause.”

The artwork debuted late last week and will stay put on site indefinitely, but we suggest you head to 14th Street between Broadway and Union Square West this week to catch it in all of its glory before the crowds.

If the visit has got you craving more outdoor art, feel free to consult our own list of the best that’s currently out there, including the trippy sculptures of cut-off looking people in Manhattan that are sure to make you do a double take, the gigantic hot dog that’s currently sitting pretty in Times Square and pastel-hued floral mural with a feminist message that is one of the newest additions to the High Line

* This article was originally published here

Op-Ed: Protect The Patient-Pharmacist Relationship

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By Mikhail Bershadsky, PharmD When I was in high school, I lost my grandmother to pancreatic cancer. She was my closest friend and my biggest cheerleader. Her passing was a tragic experience that inspired me to pursue my passion for patient-centered care; I began volunteering at a nursing home to honor her memory. After graduation,…

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* This article was originally published here

NYC beaches are opening this weekend!

NYC beaches are opening this weekend!

Summer technically starts on June 20, but every New Yorker knows that the real start of the season coincides with beach reopening day.

Lucky for us, that time of year is here: starting this weekend, NYC Parks is officially re-opening its 14 miles of shoreline.

RECOMMENDED: The best beaches in NYC for fun in the sun

The beaches reopening on Memorial Day weekend include Coney Island and Brighton Beach in Brooklyn, Cedar Grove Beach in Staten Island, and Orchard Beach in the Bronx. 

The other piece of good news is that the weather this weekend looks pretty promising.

We’re starting off strong on Friday with sun and a high of 80 degrees. While we might get some rain on Saturday, Sunday is going to be sunny again with a high of 78 degrees. If you want to catch the sunset, which you should, keep in mind that it is scheduled to happen around 8:15pm this weekend. 

Back to the beaches: there are a lot of great ones to visit, but our favorites in the NYC area include Jacob Riis, which is LGBTQ-friendly; Fort Tilden Beach in the Rockaways; and Jones Beach in Long Island, which boasts some of the whitest sands around. 

NYC outdoor pools, on the other hand, will open towards the end of June. If you can’t wait until then, though, there are plenty of outdoor hotel and rooftop pools that are opening sooner. Some of our favorites include the pool at the William Vale, The Rockaway Hotel and Spa and the Hotel Indigo pool in Williamsburg. Make sure to contact the hotels before you go to verify that their pools are open for the season.

NYC beaches are going to be accessible through September 8, although the city has been considering keeping them open for a few months longer in the future. If a proposed bill by City Councilman Shekar Krishnan actually goes through, New York City pools and beaches could stay open until the second Sunday of October, effectively extending the season by several weeks. 

If you plan on dipping your toes in the water this weekend, keep in mind that lifeguards are only on duty from 10am until 6pm and, of course, make sure to wear lots and lots of sunscreen.

* This article was originally published here

Exploring New Horizons: Top Reasons To Enter The Franchising Frontier In Harlem And Beyond! 

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Entering a new market can be extremely daunting and overwhelming, especially for a first time investor looking to make it in this dynamic, turbulent environment. As an entrepreneur, you’ll need to find the best strategies, processes, and practices to help you navigate the landscape while building a solid income stream. If you’re looking to invest…

The post Exploring New Horizons: Top Reasons To Enter The Franchising Frontier In Harlem And Beyond!  appeared first on Harlem World Magazine.

* This article was originally published here

Vampire Weekend MetroCards are now available at two NYC subway stations

Vampire Weekend MetroCards are now available at two NYC subway stations

Although the MTA is currently asking New Yorkers to create the final limited-edition MetroCards as the form fades out to give way to the system’s tap-and-go technology, the agency still has a few surprises up its sleeves: a little over a week after breaking the Internet with the special-edition Ice Spice passes, the MTA has announced that it will produce 60,000 MetroCards featuring Grammy Award-winning indie rock band Vampire Weekend.

Vampire Weekend MetroCard
Photograph: Marc A. Hermann/MTA

Available at select subway stations in Manhattan only, the tickets are a collaboration with Columbia Records in support of the band’s latest studio album, Only God Was Above Us.

As of yesterday, the special Vampire Weekend MetroCards are only available at the 14th Street–Union Square station and the Grand Central–42nd Street station. Given how much traffic passes through each destination daily, we suggest heading there ASAP to get your hands on one of the few limited-edition cards.

Vampire Weekend MetroCard
Photograph: Marc A. Hermann/MTA

If the team-up has got you scratching your head in confusion, here’s a bit of a Vampire Weekend crash course: the rock band was founded right here in New York back in 2006, while all three members were still students at Columbia University.

In the less than two decades since, the trio has won two Grammy Awards and earned five nominations, turning their origin story into a real New York-like fairytale.

The MTA is only releasing two more limited-edition MetroCards—something to keep in mind if you’re trying to collect them all!

* This article was originally published here

DanceAfrica celebrates the African Rainforest

The uniquely dynamic communal dance event that is DanceAfrica brings its annual celebration of African diasporic culture to the Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM) from May 24–27, with a program built around a theme that both celebrates the present and reaffirms the group’s commitment to the future of the global community. 

“Every year, we embrace the diversity of the African continent,” said Artistic Director Abdel R. Salaam. “Since 1977, when Baba Chuck Davis founded DanceAfrica, the event has featured a coming together of the communities of the African diaspora.” 

Since Salaam has headed the annual cultural phenomenon, it has featured dance companies from Senegal, Guinea, South Africa, Rwanda, Burkina Faso, and  Ghana. “We’ve also honored the African American dance companies that joined Baba Chuck Davis when he launched Dance Africa here at BAM in 1977,” Salaam added, highlighting the celebration’s commitment to programs that are both entertaining and engaged with major local and global issues. 

“This year, the title of our program is ‘Cameroon: The Origin of Communities/ A Calabash of Culture.’”

Salaam said DanceAfrica is excited to welcome Sirens: Protectors of the Rainforest, a community-based Brooklyn dance ensemble, led by Cameroon-born Mafor Mambo Tse, as well as the percussion ensemble Women of the Calabash, which was founded by ancestor Madeline Yayodele Nelson and is now headed by Caren Calder. 

The Women of the Calabash musical ensemble is known for its mastery of such percussion instruments as the Shekere, djembe, and mbira, as well as the calabash, and the creation of complex multilayered polyphonic rhythms that make anyone within earshot want to get up and dance. 

Also on this year’s program are the DanceAfrica Spirit Walkers and the talented young artists of tomorrow who comprise the Billie’s Youth Arts Academy Dance Ensemble. 

As DanceAfrica devotees know, the annual festival, established by Baba Chuck Davis back in the 1970s, also features a total immersion in African culture that includes dance classes and more, affording the whole family a fun-filled exploration of the fundamentals of African dance. This year, classes will focus on Cameroonian dance. There will also be film screenings, an art installation, the DanceAfrica bazaar, and much more.

With the ultimate goal of highlighting the interconnectedness of dance, music, and the ancient foundations of human culture, DanceAfrica 2024 is focused on the exploration of Cameroonian cultural practices and the Rainforest. “Protecting the Rainforest is important to protecting our global environment,” Salaam said. “The Rainforest is the breath of life for the planet.”

Tse, head of Sirens: Protectors of the Rainforest, a performance group that started in 2008, couldn’t agree more. “We use our African dance and music as a siren call, an alarm, to alert people to what’s happening in what we call the Congo Forest. It is endangered. And when I say the Congo Forest, I’m not talking about the country [of] Congo. I’m talking about the Rainforest that starts from Nigeria through Equatorial Guinea and goes all the way down to Angola…Protecting it is something that’s been part of our dance company’s work since the beginning. That’s why we call ourselves Sirens: Protectors of the Rainforest. Our main goal is to sound an alarm—a siren call for the environment.” 

The rainforest is not just important to her people who, said Tse, traveled throughout Africa before settling in Cameroon many, many years ago at what she calls “the mouth of the forest.” It is equally important to all life on the planet because the rainforest is “the lungs of the earth.” Today, its well-being is even more important. “Protecting it has been our main goal from the beginning, but now countries are pilfering and killing the trees, animals, and people. They are also endangered. That’s why we call ourselves what we call ourselves.” 

Tse also described the ethnic diversity of Cameroon, which she said is known as “Africa in Miniature” because “everything you find on the African continent, you find in Cameroon.” That creates a diversity in the dances and dancers that allows them to perform any style. 

As Tes explained, traditionally there are two main ethnic groups in Cameroon. “I am an Ewondo woman, and we are one of a few ethnic groups that have played a large part in shaping the national Cameroonian culture,” she said. Nonetheless, she wants DanceAfrica audiences to experience as much of the variety of Cameroon as possible and to come away with, in addition to a foot-stomping, hand-clapping enjoyment of the drumming and the dance, a glimpse of Cameroonian culture. “I want people to enjoy the music and the dance as we perform works like the one whose name translates to ‘My Feet are the Drum,’ which draws from ancestral spirits, because we can’t do a performance without honoring the forest, and this is our way of allowing people to see the gods of the forest.” 

Salaam said the message articulated by Tse will be underscored by the DanceAfrica Spirit Walkers as they do a dance Salaam choreographed entitled “Rain Forest: Streams and Reflections.” It will feature the usual physicality that audiences have come to expect. 

Salaam said the stage design will capture the ambiance of ecological phenomena that he and a small team of BAM staffers encountered in the fall of 2023 during a trip to Cameroon, allowing the audience to experience something closely resembling the awe he felt in that visit and encountered what he calls “a life-changing experience.” 

For more info, visit www.bam.org/danceafrica.

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* This article was originally published here