Recent Comments
Nunu is open. Just walked by it. (I work in 4 WTC.) — person on Seen & Heard: Has Nunu Chocolates Closed?
All hail the salt shed! It is glorious. — William P Meyerhofer on The Story of the Salt Shed
Correct. The building is going up behind Trinity Church. — steve on Seen & Heard: Has Nunu Chocolates Closed?
68 Trinity Place? — Robert Ripps on Seen & Heard: Has Nunu Chocolates Closed?
10. Mai house? — Dandy on Seen & Heard: David Burke Kitchen Has Closed
The store at 28 Warren is the last of its kind remaining on the block which was once filled with similar stores. I always thought it deserved a feature in The Citizen. A true remnant of the old neighborhood. — J S Miller on Seen & Heard: The Future of Tribeca Citizen
Great images! Thank you for these. — Marcus on Instagram Tribeca (Vol. 29)
Magnificent! Is this your final love letter to Tribeca? — SW on Instagram Tribeca (Vol. 29)
Re: the new newsstands. Mainly they seem to sell candy and magazines. Actual newspapers? Occasionally the Post. I've never seen one with the Times. — George Bacon on Seen & Heard: Slow Going at the Greenwich Street Hotel
You probably want to change "Cortlandt Alley" in your lede to "Cortlandt Way." — Charles Komanoff on Seen & Heard: The Entrance to 91 Leonard
Not even a quarter-bad. In fact, quite good! Thank you. — HCR on Instagram Tribeca (Vol. 29)
B Flat is open as usual. — James on Seen & Heard: David Burke Kitchen Has Closed
Check out @concreteutopia in IG, lots of Tribeca buildings featured. — Coco on Instagram Tribeca (Vol. 28)
Although David Burke’s name was used for the DBK restaurant at The James, he hasn’t had any involvement in its operation for years because of a business dispute. — Jolene on Seen & Heard: David Burke Kitchen Has Closed
Eric, that's Jan 15, 2020, right? — Charles Komanoff on Seen & Heard: The Future of Tribeca Citizen
The building is a beautiful geometric sculpture in its own right. — Marcus on The Story of the Salt Shed
5) B flat? — Ben on Seen & Heard: David Burke Kitchen Has Closed
So glad to hear about the continuation of TC. Will definitely miss Erik for sure. Anywho, was googling stuff for my kid to do over winter break and came across Playday. According to the website, there will be a Tribeca location, not sure where though... https://www.playdaynyc.com/locations — TribecaMom on Seen & Heard: The Future of Tribeca Citizen
"The process of handing over Tribeca Citizen is underway (knock on wood)" That's great news! Although your guidance will be missed. Maybe you'll be tempted to do a guest blog post once in a while ... — Marcus on Seen & Heard: The Future of Tribeca Citizen
Hurray for more TC! — Susan on Seen & Heard: The Future of Tribeca Citizen
"Poor taste" - good one! — J Parnell on Quiz: Dead Restaurants (Part 7)
This quiz is in extreme poor taste. You all must have a lot of time on your hands. — TG on Quiz: Dead Restaurants (Part 7)
Or, as someone in an earlier posting commented, on top of City Hall. — Marcus on In the News: The Mayor’s Push for His 50-Story Jail Tower
Maybe the Port Authority could find a site for the 50 story jail tower... — James on In the News: The Mayor’s Push for His 50-Story Jail Tower
Wow, lots of Arc Snark out there! The new edifice will be a very welcome - and beautiful - addition to a Downtown scene that could readily use a world-class arts center. My question for TC is somewhat tangential: the new WTC site was originally planned with the idea that FiDi and BP would eventually be connected to the rest of Manhattan because Greenwich street (North & South direction) and Fulton, Vesey, and Liberty streets (East & West) would once again be "through" streets allowing traffic for the first time since the original WTC was constructed. I understand that in the age of terrorism, those streets have been blocked off to all but foot traffic, but the streets themselves are still there. Is there a contingency plan somewhere stating that - some day - those connecting streets will once again be open to vehicle traffic? — Nicholas de Seve on First Look: The Performing Arts Center at the World Trade Center








