Seventh Avenue (Manhattan)

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Seventh Avenue
Times Square 1-2.JPG
Seventh Avenue at 47th Street at Times Square
Other name(s) Seventh Avenue South (south of 11th St)
Fashion Avenue (26th–42nd Sts)
Powell Boulevard (north of 110th St)
Owner City of New York
Maintained by NYCDOT
Length 5.3 mi[1][2] (8.5 km)
Location Manhattan, New York City
South end Varick / Clarkson Streets in West Village
Major
junctions
Times Square in Midtown
Macombs Dam Bridge in Harlem
North end Harlem River Drive / 155th Street in Harlem
East Sixth Avenue (below 59th St)
Lenox Avenue (above 110th St)
West Eighth Avenue (below 59th St)
Douglass Boulevard (above 110th St)
Construction
Commissioned March 1811
Looking up Seventh Avenue from Greenwich Village to Central Park
The information booth and sculpture at 39th Street in the Garment District
File:EM NYC (2185085378).jpg
Madison Square Garden is located between West 31st and 33rd Streets; Pennsylvania Station is under it.
Greater Refuge Temple on Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Boulevard

Seventh Avenue – co-named Fashion Avenue between West 26th Street and 42nd Streets, and known as Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Boulevard north of Central Park – is a thoroughfare on the West Side of the borough of Manhattan in New York City. It is southbound below Central Park and a two-way street north of the park.

Seventh Avenue originates in the West Village at Clarkson Street, where Varick Street becomes Seventh Avenue South (which becomes Seventh Avenue proper after the road crosses Greenwich Avenue and West 11th Street). It is interrupted by Central Park from 59th to 110th Street. Artisans' Gate is the 59th Street exit from Central Park to Seventh Avenue. North of Warriors' Gate at the north end of the Park, the avenue carries traffic in both directions through Harlem, where it is called Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Boulevard. Addresses continue as if the street was continuous through Central Park, with the first block north of the park being the 1800 block. The road has two northern termini; an upper level terminates at the western end of the Macombs Dam Bridge, traveling over the Harlem River, where Jerome Avenue commences in the Bronx. A lower level continues a bit further north and curves into the lower level of West 155th Street.

History

Seventh Avenue was originally laid out in the Commissioners' Plan of 1811.

The southern terminus of Seventh Avenue was Eleventh Street in Greenwich Village through the early part of the 20th Century. It was extended southward, to link up with Varick Street, in 1914, and Varick was widened at the same time.[3] Extension of the avenue allowed better vehicular connections between midtown Manhattan and the commercial district in what is now TriBeCa. It also permitted construction of the New York City Subway IRT Broadway – Seventh Avenue Line[4] which opened in 1918.[5]

Extension of the avenue was under consideration for several years, and was approved by the New York City Board of Estimate in September 1911, when the first $3 million appropriation was made for the initial planning of the work. The extension had been urged by civic groups to meet the commercial needs of Greenwich Village. A significant number of old buildings were marked for demolition in the extension,[4] and the demolished buildings included the Bedford Street Methodist Church, constructed in 1840.[3]

Most of Seventh Avenue has carried traffic one-way southbound since June 6, 1954.[6] The portion north of Times Square carried two-way traffic until March 10, 1957.[7]

Transportation

Seventh Avenue is served by the 1 2 3 trains for most of its length, with N Q R service between 42nd Street and Central Park South. The Seventh Avenue station also serves the B D E trains.[8] North of the park, Powell Boulevard is served by the 155th Street station on the B D trains. It is also served by numerous local buses.[9]

Notable districts and buildings

South of 14th Street Seventh Avenue is a major thoroughfare in the West Village. The now defunct Saint Vincent's Catholic Medical Center was a main downtown hospital on Seventh Avenue and 11th Street.

Running through the Garment District (which stretches from 12th Avenue to 5th Avenue and 34th Street to 39th Street), it is referred to as Fashion Avenue due to its role as a center of the garment and fashion industry and the famed fashion designers who established New York as a world fashion capital. The first, temporary signs designating the section of Seventh Avenue as "Fashion Avenue" were dual-posted in 1972, with permanent signs added over the ensuing years.[10]

Seventh Avenue intersects with Broadway and with 42nd Street at Times Square, with multiple buildings at the intersections.

Notable buildings located on Seventh Avenue include:

Notable buildings on Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Boulevard include:

In popular culture

Seventh Avenue is frequently mentioned in films, plays and books.

  • Seventh Avenue was mentioned in the Simon and Garfunkel song "The Boxer," in which the protagonist mentions receiving a "come-on from the whores on Seventh Avenue."
  • In the 1962 play and 1965 film A Thousand Clowns, Seventh Avenue is frequently mentioned as being in proximity.
  • In the 1973 Steely Dan song "The Boston Rag" the protagonist declares "There was nothing that I could do So I pointed my car down Seventh Avenue".
  • In the 1978 Rolling Stones song "Shattered", from the Some Girls album, Mick Jagger sings "I can't give it away on Seventh Avenue."
  • Seventh Avenue is also mentioned in Dashiell Hammett's The Maltese Falcon, when detective Sam Spade tells the gunsel Wilmer that his telling him to "shove off" "would go over big back on Seventh Avenue. But you're not in Romeville now. You're in my burg."
  • In Dave Gibbons's Watching the Watchmen (2008), the comics artist speculates that the Gunga Diner, Utopia Cinema, Promethean Cab Co. and Institute for Extraspatial Studies are situated at the intersection of Seventh Avenue and West 31st Street.
  • Seventh Avenue was the title and subject of a 1977 NBC TV miniseries which focused on the Garment District.[11]
  • In the 2008 The Gaslight Anthem song "Here's Looking At You, Kid", Seventh Avenue is mentioned in the lyric, "goes crazy over that New York scene on Seventh Avenue".[12]
  • The Pet Shop Boys' song "New York City Boy" has as its prominent refrain the line "'Cause you're a New York City boy, where Seventh Avenue meets Broadway".
  • The 1980s hair metal band Ratt featured a song dedicated to Seventh Avenue on their third studio album Dancing Undercover. The song referred to meeting a Playboy Bunny on Seventh Avenue.

See also

References

Notes

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  3. 3.0 3.1 Staff (March 22, 1914) "Wreckers Busy in Old Greenwich", The New York Times
  4. 4.0 4.1 Staff (September 24, 1911) "Seventh Avenue Extension Will Create Great Business Revival in Old Greenwich" The New York Times
  5. Staff (July 2, 1918) "Open New Subway to Regular Traffic", The New York Times
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  10. Nemy, Enid.(June 8, 1972) "Everybody -- Well, Almost -- Attended A Mammoth Party on 'Fashion Ave.'" The New York Times
  11. "Seventh Avenue" (1977), Internet Movie Database
  12. "Here's Looking At You, Kid", SongMeanings.net"

External links