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MOST RECENT ARTICLES BY:
Caroline Spivack
See all their articles from across New York Magazine
developing
Dec. 10, 2020
Queens Megaproject Passes With Barely Any Affordable Housing
Out of 1,725 apartments, just 90 will be below-market-rate.
streets
Dec. 3, 2020
From Prada Pumps to Sacks of Rice: It’s All Free at These New Brooklyn Stores
“We had a shelf of cereal, and then four black leather BDSM harnesses.”
evictions
Nov. 30, 2020
Here’s What Happens When You Fight the City’s ‘Worst Landlord’
The tenants of a crumbling Crown Heights building went on a rent strike and now the owner’s trying to evict everyone.
streets
Nov. 20, 2020
Should Parking Snitches Get Riches?
A new bill would give New Yorkers a 25 percent cut of fines for tattling on illegally parked cars.
developing
Nov. 19, 2020
Will You Someday Want to Live on Rikers Island?
Once new jails rise elsewhere, the island could become a built-from-scratch neighborhood.
the locals
Nov. 16, 2020
Why Did Rockaway’s Community Fridge Get Dragged out to Sea?
A mutual-aid mystery.
developing
Nov. 13, 2020
Flowers Win Over Towers (for Now) in Shade Lawsuit
A judge has paused plans for two 39-story buildings that would starve the Brooklyn Botanic Garden of sunlight.
the rent is too damn high
Nov. 12, 2020
Only 15,000 People Met New York’s Criteria for Rent Relief
More than 1.3 million New Yorkers statewide are at risk of eviction.
streets
Nov. 11, 2020
Perking Up the Plywood: Artists Get Their Hands on the City’s Streeteries
From mirror mosaics to sprawling murals.
developing
Nov. 10, 2020
Will Queens Activists Flush Yet Another Luxury Development?
There’s a new fight over a swath of undeveloped waterfront land in Flushing.
first tuesday in november
Nov. 9, 2020
South Brooklyn Is on the Verge of Electing a QAnon Supporter
A follower of the feverish conspiracy theory QAnon is currently leading an Assembly race for a historically blue seat in South Brooklyn.
neighborhood news
Nov. 6, 2020
Waiting for the Amtrak President, Covid on Staten Island, and Other News
Weekly roundup of the important — and unimportant — NYC news you should know about from this week.
evictions
Nov. 4, 2020
In the Midst of All This, Cuomo Put Out Another Eviction Order
What better time to drop an executive order affecting thousands of eviction cases than Election Night?
first tuesday in november
Nov. 4, 2020
New York City’s New Congressional Class Really Believes in Affordable Housing
Expect plenty of new bills aimed at making renting in the city less painful.
neighborhood news
Oct. 30, 2020
Astor Hair Is Closing, Rat-Skeleton Rain, and Other News
The important — and unimportant — things that happened around town this week.
neighborhood news
Oct. 23, 2020
Manhattan Rents Drop, Stray Pig Busts Into a Brooklyn Backyard, and Other News
The important — and unimportant — things that happened around town this week.
streets
Oct. 23, 2020
Stoop-to-Stoop: A Week of Curbside Finds From a Stooping Pro
“I was looking for a cup of coffee, but instead stumbled upon this really nice desk.”
developing
Oct. 21, 2020
Where Could the City Squeeze New Housing Into Soho?
The exclusive neighborhood could see thousands of new apartments — some of them “affordable” — if the city gets its way.
transit
Oct. 19, 2020
After a Daylong Debacle, the East River Ferry Is Headed Back to Greenpoint
A new landowner, giving minimal notice, briefly stopped it from docking on Monday. Riders were not happy.
the establishment
Oct. 19, 2020
Who Will Determine the Post-Amazon Future for Long Island City?
Plans to reshape the waterfront are stuck in a rudderless moment.
neighborhood news
Oct. 16, 2020
Another Challenge to Evictions Pause Fails, Van Halen Avenue, and Other News
Here’s what’s going on around town this week.
rankings
Oct. 14, 2020
How 50 New York Buildings Scored on Their Energy-Efficiency Report Cards
And, yes, they will have to post them in their lobbies.
tenants
Sept. 30, 2020
Governor Cuomo’s ‘Moratorium’ on Evictions Won’t Really Stop Evictions
It’s “still full of loopholes,” as one lawyer put it.
skyline
Sept. 23, 2020
The Industry City Megadevelopment That Wasn’t, and How the Deal Fell Apart
Developers pulled the plug on a major rezoning, and the implications could be felt across the city.
neighborhoods
Sept. 17, 2020
New Yorkers Step in to Keep City Parks From Turning Into ‘Junkyards’
The city is neglecting its parks in the pandemic, just when we need them most.
neighborhood news
Aug. 25, 2020
Scavengers Unearth Buried History — and Maybe Radiation — at Dead Horse Bay
“It’s the closest you can come to time travel.”
cityscape
July 31, 2020
New Yorkers Are Using a 1930s-Era Tactic to Stop Evictions
Amid waning protections for renters and unemployment rates not seen since the Great Depression, eviction defense is poised for a resurgence.