Astoria, Queens 36th Street between 30th Avenue and 31st Avenue in Astoria 36th Street between 30th Avenue and 31st Avenue in Astoria Astoria is positioned in New York City Astoria - Astoria Show map of New York City City New York City Astoria is a middle-class and commercial neighborhood with a populace of 78,793 in the northwestern corner of the New York City borough of Queens.

Located in Community Board 1, Astoria is bounded by the East River and is adjoining to three other Queens neighborhoods: Long Island City, Sunnyside (bordering at Northern Boulevard), and Woodside (bordering at 50th Street).

Astoria is patrolled by the New York City Police Department's 114th Precinct. 8.1 Born in Astoria Beginning in the early 19th century, well-to-do New Yorkers constructed large residences around 12th and 14th streets, an region that later became known as Astoria Village (now Old Astoria).

From Astor's summer home in Hell Gate, Manhattan on what is now East 87th Street near York Avenue he could see athwart the East River the new Long Island village titled in his honor.

The family eventually established Steinway Village for their workers, a business town that provided school instruction in German as well as English. Part of the motivation for locating the Steinway factory in Queens was to keep the workers isolated from the ferment of workforce organizing and radicalism occurring in other parts of New York, prominently the Lower East Side. Astoria and a several other encircling villages, including Steinway, were incorporated into Long Island City in 1870.

Long Island City remained an autonomous municipality until it was incorporated into New York City in 1898.

Today, much of the Astoria waterfront is being redeveloped and underutilized industrialized sites in forgotten historic neighborhoods are being revived.

Hallets Point is one of five former industrialized sites on the waterfront being transformed, and will bring seven new mixed-use residentiary towers, including 2,000 market-rate units and 500 affordable units, into the neighborhood. The evolution will also include new waterfront parks, a supermarket, retail shops and restaurants, and two new schools.

These waterfront projects were designed by a New York architectural firm, in conjunction with private developers, town/city agencies and landscape architects. 30th Avenue, Astoria, Queens, NYC 31st Avenue at 33rd Street in Astoria Many Irish settled in the region during the waves of Irish immigration into New York City amid the 19th and early 20th centuries.

Italians were the next momentous immigrants in Astoria, and various Italian restaurants, delis, bakeries, and pizza shops are found throughout Astoria, especially in the Ditmars Boulevard area.

The Astoria Center of Israel, which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, was assembled in 1925 after outgrowing the former Congregation Mishkan Israel, which was assembled in 1904. Many Maltese also live in Astoria, around 20,000, and although this populace has steadily been emigrating from the area, there are still many Maltese, supported by the Maltese Center of New York. In the 1990s, Steinway Street between 28th Avenue and Astoria Boulevard saw the establishment of many Arabic shops, restaurants and cafes, which is unofficially called "Little Egypt".

Astoria's South American and European populace has seen momentous growth since the early 1990s, including a large populace of Brazilians, who reside in the 36th Avenue area.

At one time, many Bangladeshi Americans settled in Astoria, but by 2001, many of the Bangladeshi American citizens in Astoria had moved to Metro Detroit.

Population losses in Queens were especially high in immigrant neighborhoods such as Astoria, which suffered the greatest populace loss in the town/city it lost over 10,000 inhabitants between the years 2000 and 2010.[why?] Detail of 1896 map of Long Island City, showing Astoria and Ravenswood, from the Greater Astoria Historical Society.

The neighborhood was part of Long Island City before to the latter's incorporation into the City of New York in 1898, and much of it is still classified as LIC by the USPS.

For instance, the easterly end of Astoria, with Steinway Street as its chief thoroughfare, is sometimes referred to simply as "Steinway", and the northern end around Ditmars Boulevard is sometimes referred to as "Ditmars", with their convergence point bearing the neighborhood name "Ditmars-Steinway". Banners displayed on lamp posts along 30th Avenue refer to it as "the Heart of Astoria". George Gibbs, a businessman from New York City who advanced it.

Ravenswood, unlike Astoria, never became a village; there was no disposition at any time to turn into independent as there was insufficient populace or commercial activeness to justify such a move.

Ravenswood remained an exclusive hamlet inside the Town of Newtown until its absorption with the Village of Astoria and the hamlets of Hunters Point, Blissville, Sunnyside, Dutch Kills, Steinway, Bowery Bay and Middleton in Newtown Township into Long Island City in 1870. In 1870, Ravenswood, along with a several other hamlets and the Village of Astoria, consolidated to form Long Island City. However, the name has retained its residentiary character through the New York City Housing Authority universal that was assembled in 1949 to 1951 with this name between 34th and 36th Avenues, and 12th and 24th Streets.

The power plant can generate approximately 2,500 megawatts of power, which is about 20 percent of New York City's electricity demand. Ditmars is a middle class section of Astoria bounded by Bowery Bay to the north, 31st Street to the east (boundary with the adjoining neighborhood of Steinway, with which Ditmars is sometimes confused), 23rd Avenue to the south and the East River on the west.

The adjoining Steinway neighborhood was largely advanced as a business town by the Steinway & Sons piano company, and encompassed homes and enhance facilities that were also available to non-employees. However, the Ditmars neighborhood was not encompassed in the Steinway & Sons business housing and related facilities project.

The neighborhood takes its name from Ditmars Boulevard which was titled in honor of Raymond Lee Ditmars, (1876-1942) famed American herpetologist and curator of Reptiles of the New York Zoological Society at the Bronx Zoo. Astoria Heights, or Upper Ditmars, is bounded by Hazen Street to the west, La Guardia Airport to the east, Bowery Bay to the north, and Astoria Boulevard and the Grand Central Parkway to the south.

Built around 1655 by Abraham Riker under a patent from Nieuw Nederland's last governor, Peter Stuyvesant, it is believed to be the earliest remaining dwelling in New York City still used as a residence. There is an adjoining family cemetery.

The Rikers Island Bridge to New York City's chief prison, Rikers Island, runs from the north end of Hazen Street.

Technically, Rikers Island is in the Bronx since New York City took it over from Long Island City in 1884, after it had took in the South Bronx but before it merged Queens.

However, like Astoria Heights, Rikers Island gets its mail from the East Elmhurst (Zip code 11370) station of the Flushing Post Office.

A residentiary street in Astoria with bike lanes Astoria Park along the East River, is Astoria's biggest park and also contains the biggest of New York City's enhance pools (at 330 feet long) which was also the former site of the 1936 and 1964 U.S.

The Hell Gate Bridge and New York Connecting Railroad/Northeast Corridor viaduct rise high above Astoria.

The earliest beer garden in New York City, Bohemian Hall, was established in 1910 when Astoria was largely Irish, Italian, Bohemian (Czech), and Slovak. The Greater Astoria Historical Society in the historic Quinn Memorial Building on the corner of Broadway and 36th Street serves as a valuable historical resource and provides tourist information.

Steinway & Sons piano factory positioned at 1 Steinway Place (not to be confused with Steinway Street) has been in operation in Astoria since the late 19th century and represents a impact of award-winning craftsmanship, arts patronage, and the once vibrant, stand-alone Steinway Village.

Bicycle lanes, assembled as part of the city's bike lane system, added to Astoria's roadways include marked space along Vernon Boulevard, 20th Avenue, 21st Street, 34th and 36th Avenues, and access to protected paths crossing the Triborough Bridge onto Randalls and Wards Islands.

Bordering both Astoria Park and Ralph De - Marco Park, a span that is occasionally closed to motor vehicle traffic amid affairs. In addition to Bohemian Hall, the Astoria Center of Israel, Paramount Studios Complex, Sohmer and Company Piano Factory, Steinway Mansion, and Trinity Lutheran Church are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Astoria is served by the small-town E M R trains of the New York City Subway, which stop at the Steinway Street and 46th Street stations on the underground IND Queens Boulevard Line, as well as the N W trains, which run along the elevated BMT Astoria Line above 31st Street. The major streets running north-south are Vernon Boulevard along the East River; 21st Street, a primary traffic artery with a mix of residentiary, commercial and industrialized areas; 31st Street; and Steinway Street (named for Heinrich Engelhard Steinweg (later Henry E.

Steinway), founder of the piano business Steinway & Sons), a primary commercial street with many retail stores, and a very prominent Middle Eastern section between Astoria Boulevard and 28th Avenue, the region is full of Middle Eastern food restaurants which present some small-town types of food from Lebanon, Egypt and Morocco, most food in these restaurants is Halal to suit the Muslim inhabitants who are chief customers in this neighborhood.

FDNY Engine 312 in Astoria, Queens Because of its location, Astoria is conveniently served by a several nearby New York City hospitals and medical centers, as well as FDNY EMS service.

The New York City Department of Education operates Astoria's enhance schools. Astoria (14-01 Astoria Boulevard) Additionally, Astoria is the final resting place of New York City mobster Frank Costello as well as ragtime composer and musician Scott Joplin.

The neighborhood has often been featured in various media; in film and television, the region is either featured as Astoria or as a setting for another locale in New York City.

The view of the bridge is similar to those found in Astoria Park and Astoria can occasionally be viewed in the background of shots facing east.

For example, the elevated train stop at Ditmars Boulevard was the locale for a chase scene, and Serpico has a clandestine meeting in Astoria Park under the Hellgate Bridge.

King Kong (1976) had a scene in Astoria, at Astoria Boulevard and 31st Street, where the two chief characters board the RR train at the Astoria Boulevard station on the BMT Astoria Line.

The Martin Scorsese film Good - Fellas (1990) was filmed on locale in Astoria.

The movie Queens Logic (1991) was filmed all around Astoria and features an Astoria landmark the Hell Gate Bridge.

The Robert De Niro film A Bronx Tale (1993) was set in the Bronx, but most of the exterior scenes were filmed in Astoria as well as the close-by neighborhood of Woodside.

The autonomous film Girls Town (1996) shows scenes shot in Astoria Park.

Woody Allen's film Hollywood Ending (2002) had scenes shot in the neighborhood encircling the Kaufman Astoria stages.

And Shia La - Beouf, and adapted from Dito Montiel's 2001 memoir about the filmmaker's experiences burgeoning up in the neighborhood amid the 1980s, was filmed at various locations around Astoria.

The Accidental Husband (2008), Directed by Griffin Dunne; with Uma Thurman, Colin Firth and Jeffrey Dean Morgan was filmed in Astoria on 33rd Street and 23rd Avenue.

The remake of the comedy film Arthur (2011) depicts at least one scene showing Astoria, Queens, using a Batmobile visual shown from 34th Street and 34th Avenue in the neighborhood.

The video game Grand Theft Auto IV which takes place in a mock New York City titled Liberty City has a neighborhood titled Steinway in the borough of Dukes, the counterpart of Queens in the game.

(A mock TV commercial for the Steinway Beer Garden, viewable at the Rockstar website, includes the voice-over remarking that the Garden is "ethnically confused.") Steinway Park is modeled after Astoria Park, with its famous outside pool (including the diving platforms) and scenic water's-edge pathway.

The video game The Godfather II depicts Astoria in its version of New York City.

Scott Fitzgerald's novel The Great Gatsby (1925), Jay Gatsby is pulled over by a policeman on a "motor cycle" in Astoria while driving with the narrator into the city.

Astoria is the setting for the novel Autobiography/Masquerade (2006), written to honor the memory of Antonio "Nino" Pellegrino, an Astoria native who appeared briefly in A Bronx Tale.

The 1970s situation comedy All in the Family was set in Astoria, although the address given for Archie Bunker's home (704 Hauser Street) is fictional.

The tv series Cosby, starring Bill Cosby, Phylicia Rashad and Madeleine Kahn (not to be confused with the earlier series The Cosby Show) was set in Astoria and was filmed there, at the Kaufman Astoria Studios on 35th Avenue. The Showtime initial series Nurse Jackie is shot at Kaufman Astoria Studios as well as on locale in Astoria.

The Netflix initial series Orange Is the New Black is shot at Kaufman Astoria Studios as well as on locale in Astoria.

Kaufman Astoria Studios has further been longtime host to the PBS series Sesame Street and has been credited with small-town shoots on films like The Stepford Wives, the 2009 remake of The Taking of Pelham 123, and the Golden Globe-winning Angels in America.

Table PL-P5 NTA: Total Population and Persons Per Acre - New York City Neighborhood Tabulation Areas*, 2010, Population Division - New York City Department of City Planning, February 2012.

Table PL-P3 - A NTA: Total Population by Mutually Exclusive Race and Hispanic Origin - New York City Neighborhood Tabulation Areas*, 2010, Population Division - New York City Department of City Planning, March 29, 2011.

Greater Astoria Historical Society.

Greater Astoria Historical Society.

Greater Astoria Historical Society.

"New York town/city guide; a elected guide to the five boroughs of the metropolis: Manhattan, Brooklyn, the Bronx, Queens, and Richmond".

The New York Daily News.

"Greater Astoria Historical Society - Events".

"Astoria: 'A Little Greece' in New York".

City of New York.

Forgotten New York: Ravenswood USA: Greater Astoria Historical Society.

*Neighborhoods: Ravenswood from the Greater Astoria Historical Society Jackson, Kenneth T., The Encyclopedia of New York City, Yale University Press, 1995, p.

"The facts confirm that this dwelling is the earliest dwelling in New York City that is still a dwelling." In 2008 the tour benefited the Greater Astoria Historical Society.

"The Astoria Pool - - Find - Net - One America Directory".

Street Necrology of Astoria, accessed December 31, 2006 "New York City's Ferry Service Set to Launch in 2017".

"Apfel was born in Astoria, Queens, on August 29, 1921.

Photos: Tony Bennett in Astoria, Newsday, September 13, 2006.

""Born in the Astoria precinct of Queens, where Tony Bennett also hails from, Davi says, 'Singing was my first love.'" "Born June 29, 1901 in Astoria, N.Y." 19, 1936, in Astoria, Queens, and interval up on Long Island, in New Hyde Park.

"Born Melanie Safka in Astoria, N.Y., Melanie won over tens of thousands of fans at the legendary Woodstock concert..." "Kambri Crews, an Astoria resident, is opening a multi-purpose comedy club called Q.E.D.

"Queens Ledger - Q E D in Astoria is A Place to Show & Tell".

"Shows Start At New Astoria Artspace".

"The Star of TBS's "Are We There Yet", Astoria's Own Christian Finnegan".

It's a space for writers, storytellers, actors, comedians, poets and creative types in our longtime neighborhood of Astoria, Queens." It was a display of compassion for the kid from Astoria, Queens, who just a several years earlier was playing in street stickball games, and now under a nationwide spotlight and World Series pressure had pitched so beautifully." "Astoria native anchoring Greek parade".

Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Queens/Long Island City and Astoria.

Article from the Greater Astoria Historical Society explaining the Queens street numbering fitness Slide show from the New York Times of comedians living in Astoria Greater Astoria Historical Society Neighborhood Watch: Astoria Neighborhoods in the New York City borough of Queens Ethnic groups in New York City

Categories:
Astoria, Queens - Arab-American culture in New York City - Astor family - Cypriot American - Former villages in New York - Greek-American culture in New York City - Greektowns in the United States - Maltese American - Neighborhoods in Queens, New York - Populated coastal places in New York