UPPER EAST SIDE

(Redirected from Upper East Side of Manhattan)
The Upper East Side at Sunset

The 'Upper East Side' is a neighborhood in the borough of Manhattan in New York City, between Central Park and the East River.
The neighborhood, with elegant rows of landmark townhouses, once known as the 'Silk Stocking District', has some of the most expensive real estate in the United States, and is believed to be the greatest concentration of individual wealth in the nation.
In the 19th century, and until the Park Avenue railroad cut was covered (finished in 1910), rich industrialists including Pittsburghers Andrew Carnegie and Henry Clay Frick began building stylish mansions and townhouses on the large lots along Fifth Avenue, abutting Central Park. One of the first sections to be developed was around 86th Street, where several prominent families of German descent, including the Schermerhorns, the Astors, and the Rhinelanders built country estates.
Yorkville as it was known, soon moved east past Lexington Avenue and became a suburb of middle-class Germans, many of whom worked in nearby piano factories, stables, and breweries.
A long high bluff fronting the river north of Beekman Place was dotted with fine suburban villas in the 19th century, the last remaining one being Gracie Mansion, now home of New York's mayors.
The Upper East Side is also notable as a significant source of political fundraising in the United States. Four of the top five zip codes in the nation for political contributions are in Manhattan. The top ZIP Code, 10021, is on the Upper East Side and generated the most money for the 2004 presidential campaigns of both George W. Bush and John Kerry.[1]
Madison Avenue from 60th Street well into the 80s is the monied crowd's main shopping strip, recently vaulting ahead of Hong Kong's Causeway Bay to become the most expensive retail real estate in the world. Zip code 10021 has the highest concentration of stores in the United States with more than $1 million in annual sales each.[2]

Contents
Geography
Demographics
Cost of living
Transportation
Landmarks and institutions
Cultural Institutions
Educational Institutions
Primary and Secondary Schools
Colleges and Universities
In Film and Television
Movies
TV
Famous Residents
See also
References
External links
Community interest sites

Geography


The Upper East Side stretches from 59th Street north to about 110th Street. Embedded within the Upper East Side are the neighborhoods of Yorkville, centered on 86th Street and Third Avenue, and Carnegie Hill, centered on 91st Street and Park Avenue and Lenox Hill centered on 69th Street and 1st Avenue. While still wealthy, Yorkville does not compare to Carnegie Hill in the scale of its wealth.
Its north-south avenues are Fifth Avenue, Madison Avenue, Park Avenue, Lexington Avenue, Third, Second and First Avenues, York Avenue, and East End Avenue (the latter runs only from East 79th Street to East 90th Street).

Demographics


As of the 2000 census, there were 207,543 people residing in the Upper East Side. The population density was 118,184 people per square mile (45,649/km²). The racial makeup of the neighborhood was 88.25% White, 6.14% Asian, 0.04% Pacific Islander, 2.34% African American, 0.09% Native American, 1.39% from other races, and 1.74% from two or more races. 5.62% of the population were Hispanic of any race.

Cost of living


The Upper East Side maintains one of the highest pricing per square foot in the United States. A 2002 report cited the average cost as $856, however, that price has noticed a substantial jump, increasing to almost as much as $1,200 per square foot as of 2006.[3] [4]

Transportation


The Upper East Side is served by one subway line, the four-track IRT Lexington Avenue Line (4, 5, 6, <6>), and local bus routes. Due to severe congestion on the subway and bus routes, the MTA is building a second subway line, the Second Avenue Subway, in the area. The first phase will run from 96th Street to 63rd Street, where it will connect with the BMT Broadway Line; service will be provided by a northern extension of the Q train. In later phases, the line will be extended north to 125th Street and south to Hanover Square, and a new T train will be created to serve the southern portion of the line.

Landmarks and institutions


Cultural Institutions

The area is host to some of the most famous museums in the world. The string of museums along Fifth Avenue fronting Central Park has been dubbed "Museum Mile." It was once named "Millionaire's Row." Among the cultural institutions on the Upper East Side:

★ The 92nd Street Y

★ The Asia Society

Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum

El Museo del Barrio

★ The Frick Collection

Goethe-Institut New York

The Jewish Museum of New York

★ The Metropolitan Museum of Art

★ The Museum of the City of New York

★ The National Academy of Design

★ The Neue Galerie

Society of Illustrators

★ The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum

★ The Whitney Museum of American Art
Educational Institutions

Primary and Secondary Schools


The Allen-Stevenson School

The Birch Wathen Lenox School

The Brearley School

The Buckley School

The Chapin School

Convent of the Sacred Heart

The Dalton School

East Side Middle School

Eleanor Roosevelt High School

The Hewitt School

Hunter College High School

Loyola School

Lycée Français de New York

Marymount School

The Nightingale-Bamford School

PS 6 (Lillie Devereux Blake School)

PS 158 (East Side Middle School)

PS 183 (Robert Louis Stevenson School)

P.S. 290 (The Manhattan New School)

★ The Ramaz School

Regis High School

Senator Robert F. Wagner Middle School (JHS 167)

St. Bernard's School

★ The Spence School

★ The Trevor Day School

Urban Academy Laboratory High School
Colleges and Universities


Cornell University Medical School

Hunter College

Marymount Manhattan College

Mount Sinai School of Medicine

Rockefeller University

In Film and Television


The Upper East Side has been a setting for many movies and television shows due to its world-class museums, expensive restaurants and boutiques, proximity to Central Park, elite schools, and influential residents.
Movies


★ ''Breakfast at Tiffany's'' (1961)

★ ''The Boys in the Band'' (1970)

★ ''Live and Let Die'' (1973)

★ ''The Bonfire of the Vanities'' (1990)

★ ''Six Degrees of Separation'' (1993)

★ ''Manhattan Murder Mystery (1993)

★ ''Ransom'' (1996)

★ ''The Devil's Advocate (1997)

★ ''Men in Black (1997)

★ ''A Perfect Murder'' (1998)

★ ''Cruel Intentions'' (1999)

★ ''25th Hour'' (2002)

★ ''The Nanny Diaries'' (2007)
TV


★ ''The Jeffersons'' (1975-1985)

★ ''Diff'rent Strokes'' (1978-1986)

★ ''The Nanny'' (1993-1999)

★ The home of Carrie Bradshaw, the iconic lead character of ''Sex and the City'' (1998-2004)

★ ''Gossip Girl'' (2007-?)

Famous Residents


The neighborhood has a long tradition of being home to some of the world's most wealthy, powerful and influential families and individuals. Some of the notables who have lived here include:
Actors, Artists, Musicians, and Writers:

Woody Allen

Candice Bergen

James Cagney

Joan Collins

Sean Combs

Greta Garbo

Art Garfunkel

George Gershwin

Rosemary Harris (part time)

Steve Hofstetter

Donna Karan

Ralph Lauren

Marx Brothers

Mary Tyler Moore

Paul Sorvino

Michael J. Fox
Athletes:

Tiki Barber

Jason Giambi
Business Moguls:

Michael Bloomberg

Rupert Murdoch

George Soros

Bruce Wasserstein
Journalists:

Katie Couric

Walter Cronkite

Barbara Walters
Political Figures:

Howard Dean

Rudy Giuliani

Caroline Kennedy

Jackie Onassis

Eleanor Roosevelt

Franklin D. Roosevelt

Eliot Spitzer
Socialites:

Nan Kempner
The Upper East Side is also the location of Sutton Place, an enclave home to many notable residents. It is also the site of a four-story townhouse built for Anne Morgan, daughter of financier J.P. Morgan, and now the official residence of the United Nations Secretary-General.

See also



East Side (Manhattan)

References


1. Big Donors Still Rule The Roost, accessed July 18, 2006.
2. Belson, Ken. "In This Town, Even a Mall Rat Can Get Rattled.", ''The New York Times'', December 20, 2006. Accessed June 7, 2007. "Already, Paramus has 320 stores with more than million in annual sales each, second in the country only to the 10021 ZIP code on the East Side of Manhattan."
3. Hevesi, Dennis. " Residential Real Estate; TriBeCa Is Priciest Neighborhood", ''The New York Times'', May 17, 2002. Accessed June 7, 2007.
4. [1]

External links


Community interest sites

Uppereast.com
Wikipages Upper East Side

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves
Featured Companies
Vacation By VVacation By V