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New York City Vietnam Veterans Memorial Plaza, New York NY | Nearby Businesses


55 Water St
New York, NY 10041

(212) 471-9496

The Memorial and the surrounding plaza provides and maintains a valuable and overdue tribute to the men and women who served in the Vietnam War. Visitors can view letters, news clippings, photos, honor plaques and diaries of those who fought in Vietnam as well as spend time near the Reflecting Fountain

Historical Place Near New York City Vietnam Veterans Memorial Plaza

Statue of Liberty National Monument
Distance: 0.3 mi Competitive Analysis
Liberty Island
New York, NY 10004

(212) 363-3200

Welcome to the Statue of Liberty Facebook page! This gift of freedom was presented by the people of France to the people of the U.S. in 1886. This iconic lady, officially called "Liberty Enlightening the World," is recognized universally by people around the world as the face of freedom -- but she is so much more than just a pretty face. During the late 1800's, images of a "yet to be constructed" statue appeared in newspapers and other print media. In order to raise funds for her construction the Statue itself had to become a brand, appearing on everything from champagne to lampshades. She became the face of fundraising on both sides of the Atlantic, generating money for her own existence. After her dedication, she became the face that welcomed immigrants to their new and unfamiliar home, the United States. After World War I - and the use of the Statue of Liberty's image to sell Liberty Bonds - she became the patriotic face of this nation. She continues to shine forth as a beacon of democracy, freedom, welcome, and patriotism.

National September 11 Memorial & Museum
Distance: 0.5 mi Competitive Analysis
180 Greenwich Street
New York, NY 10006

(212) 312-8800

The 9/11 Memorial remembers and honors the 2,983 people who were killed in the horrific attacks of September 11, 2001 and February 26, 1993. The design, created by Michael Arad and Peter Walker, consists of two reflecting pools formed in the footprints of the original Twin Towers and a plaza of trees. The 9/11 Memorial Museum displays monumental artifacts linked to the events of 9/11, while presenting intimate stories of loss, compassion, reckoning, and recovery that are central to telling the story of the 2001 and 1993 attacks and the aftermath.

Statue of Liberty, Ellis Island - New York
Distance: 0.4 mi Competitive Analysis
Brocklyne
New York, NY 10004

12123633200

9/11 Memorial
Distance: 0.5 mi Competitive Analysis
1 Albany St
New York, NY 10006

Charging Bull
Distance: 0.3 mi Competitive Analysis
1 Bowling Grn
New York, NY 10004

(212) 966-6068

Charging Bull, which is sometimes referred to as the Wall Street Bull or the Bowling Green Bull, is a bronze sculpture that stands in Bowling Green Park in the Financial District in Manhattan, New York City. Originally guerilla art, by Arturo Di Modica, its popularity led to it being a permanent feature.DescriptionThe 7100lb sculpture stands 11ft tall and measures 16ft long. The oversize sculpture depicts a bull, the symbol of aggressive financial optimism and prosperity, leaning back on its haunches and with its head lowered as if ready to charge. The sculpture is both a popular tourist destination which draws thousands of people a day, as well as "one of the most iconic images of New York" and a "Wall Street icon" symbolizing Wall Street and the Financial District.In Outdoor Monuments of Manhattan: A Historical Guide, Dianne Durante describes the sculpture:The Bulls head is lowered, its nostrils flare, and its wickedly long, sharp horns are ready to gore; it's an angry, dangerous beast. The muscular body twists to one side, and the tail is curved like a lash: the Bull is also energetic and in motion.The bronze color and hard, metallic texture of the sculpture's surface emphasises the brute force of the creature. The work was designed and placed so that viewers could walk around it, which also suggests the creature's own movement is unrestricted — a point reinforced by the twisting posture of the bull's body, according to Durante.

Fraunces Tavern Restaurant
Distance: 0.1 mi Competitive Analysis
54 Pearl St
New York, NY 10004

(212) 968-1776

Trinity Church (Manhattan)
Distance: 0.4 mi Competitive Analysis
74 Trinity Pl
New York, NY 10006

(212) 602-0867

Trinity Church, at 75 Broadway in lower Manhattan, is a historic, active, well-endowed parish church in the Episcopal Diocese of New York. Trinity Church is near the intersection of Wall Street and Broadway, in New York City, New York.History and architectureIn 1696, Governor Benjamin Fletcher approved the purchase of land in Lower Manhattan by the Church of England community for construction of a new church. The parish received its charter from King William III on May 6, 1697. Its land grant specified an annual rent of sixty bushels of wheat. The first rector was William Vesey (for whom nearby Vesey Street is named), a protege of Increase Mather, who served for 49 years until his death in 1746.First Trinity ChurchThe first Trinity Church building, a modest rectangular structure with a gambrel roof and small porch, was constructed in 1698. According to historical records, Captain William Kidd lent the runner and tackle from his ship for hoisting the stones.Anne, Queen of Great Britain, increased the parish's land holdings to 215acre in 1705. Later, in 1709, William Huddleston founded Trinity School as the Charity School of the church, and classes were originally held in the steeple of the church. In 1754, King's College (now Columbia University) was chartered by King George II of Great Britain and instruction began with eight students in a school building near the church.

New York Stock Exchange
Distance: 0.3 mi Competitive Analysis
11 Wall St
New York, NY 10005

Ground Zero - 9/11 Memorial
Distance: 0.5 mi Competitive Analysis
World Trade Center
New York, NY 10001

(212) 266-5211

9/11 Memorial
Distance: 0.6 mi Competitive Analysis
120 Liberty Street
New York, NY 10007

(212) 267-2085

Bowling Green
Distance: 0.3 mi Competitive Analysis
11 Broadway
New York, NY 10004

(212) 344-1145

Bowling Green is a small public park in the Financial District of Manhattan, at the end of Broadway, next to the site of the original Dutch fort of New Amsterdam. Built in 1733, originally including a bowling green, it is the oldest public park in New York City and is surrounded by its original 18th-century fence. The iconic Charging Bull sculpture is exhibited on its northern end.Bowling Green Fence and Park is listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places. It is abutted by Battery Park to the west.HistoryColonial eraThe park has long been a center of activity in the city going back to the days of New Amsterdam, when it served as a cattle market between 1638 and 1647, and parade ground. In 1675, the Common Council designated the "plaine afore the forte" for an annual market of "graine, cattle and other produce of the country". In 1677 the city's first public well was dug in front of Fort Amsterdam at Bowling Green. In 1733, the Common Council leased a portion of the parade grounds to three prominent neighboring landlords for a peppercorn a year, upon their promise to create a park that would be "the delight of the Inhabitants of the City" and add to its "Beauty and Ornament"; the improvements were to include a "bowling green" with "walks therein". The surrounding streets were not paved with cobblestones until 1744.

Ground Zero / Zona Cero. New York
Distance: 0.5 mi Competitive Analysis
1 Albany St
New York, NY 10006

Federal Hall
Distance: 0.3 mi Competitive Analysis
26 Wall Street
New York, NY 10005

(631) 922-1578

Federal Hall, built in 1700 as New York's City Hall, later served as the first capitol building of the United States of America under the Constitution, as well as the site of George Washington's inauguration as the first President of the United States under the Constitution. It was also where the United States Bill of Rights was introduced in the First Congress. The building was demolished in 1812.Federal Hall National Memorial was built in 1842 as the United States Custom House, on the site of the old Federal Hall on Wall Street, and later served as a sub-Treasury building. It is now operated by the National Park Service as a national memorial commemorating the historic events that occurred there.HistoryHistoric buildingThe original structure on the site was built as New York's second City Hall in 1699 - 1703, on Wall Street, in what is today the Financial District of Lower Manhattan. In 1735, John Peter Zenger, an American newspaper publisher, was arrested for committing libel against the British royal governor and was imprisoned and tried there. His acquittal on the grounds that the material he had printed was true established freedom of the press as it was later defined in the Bill of Rights.

Ground Zero
Distance: 0.6 mi Competitive Analysis
1 World Trade Center
New York, NY 10006

City Pier A
Distance: 0.5 mi Competitive Analysis
22 Battery Pl
New York, NY 10004

(212) 344-0500

City Pier A is a municipal pier in the Hudson River at Battery Park near the southern end of Manhattan in New York City. It has also been named Liberty Gateway. It is the last surviving historic pier in the city.The Pier was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1975, and was designated a New York City landmark in 1977.HistoryPier A was built from 1884 to 1886 to serve the New York City Department of Docks and Harbor Police. The engineer in charge of construction and design was George Sears Greene Jr. (1837-1922), the son of the civil engineer and Union general George S. Greene (1801-1899). The design mirrored the Statue of Liberty which could be viewed from a similar but shorter tower. The roof was tin, painted green to resemble copper. In renovation by the Battery Park City Authority this roof was discarded, and replaced with copper.The pier was expanded in 1900 and again in 1919 with a clock installed in the pier's tower as a memorial to 116,000 US servicemen who died during World War I. The clock is a ship's clock and was donated by Daniel G. Reid, founder of United States Steel Corporation. The clock was unveiled at noon on January 25, 1919 by Rear Admiral Josiah S. McKean, with speeches made by Mayor John Francis Hylan and Docks Commissioner George Murray Hulbert. It is said to be the first World War I memorial erected in the United States.

Federal Reserve Bank of New York
Distance: 0.4 mi Competitive Analysis
33 Liberty St
New York, NY 10045

The Federal Reserve Bank of New York is one of the 12 Federal Reserve Banks of the United States. It is located at 33 Liberty Street, New York, NY. It is responsible for the Second District of the Federal Reserve System, which encompasses New York State, the 12 northern counties of New Jersey, Fairfield County in Connecticut, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Working within the Federal Reserve System, the New York Federal Reserve Bank implements monetary policy, supervises and regulates financial institutions and helps maintain the nation's payment systems.Among the other regional banks, New York Federal Reserve Bank and its president are considered first among equals. Its current president is William C. Dudley. It is by far the largest (by assets), most active (by volume) and most influential of the 12 regional Federal Reserve Banks.ResponsibilitiesThe New York Fed publishes a monthly recession probability prediction derived from the yield curve and based on the work by Dr. Arturo Estrella & Dr. Tobias Adrian.Their models show that when the difference between short-term interest rates (using three-month T-bills) and long-term interest rates (using ten-year Treasury bonds) at the end of a Federal Reserve tightening cycle is negative or less than 93 basis points positive that a rise in unemployment usually occurs.

23 Wall Street
Distance: 0.3 mi Competitive Analysis
23 Wall St
New York, NY 10005-3001

(212) 785-4594

23 Wall Street or "The Corner", is an office building formerly owned by J.P. Morgan & Co. - later the Morgan Guaranty Trust Company - located at the southeast corner of Wall Street and Broad Street, in the heart of the Financial District in Manhattan, New York City.The building was designated a New York City landmark in 1965, and was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1972. Since it was purchased in 2008 by interests associated with the billionaire industrialist Sam Pa, it has been left in a state of disuse.DescriptionDesigned by Trowbridge & Livingston and built in 1913, the building was so well known as the headquarters of J.P. Morgan & Co. - the "House of Morgan" - that it was deemed unnecessary to mark the exterior with the Morgan name. The building is known for its classical architecture and formerly for its well-appointed interior, including a massive crystal chandelier and English oak paneling, but, overall, is more notable for its history than its architecture.Even though property prices in the area were very high, the Morgan building was purposely designed to be only four stories tall; the contrast to the surrounding high-rises is reinforced by the astylar exterior, rendered as a single high piano nobile over a low basement, with a mezzanine above, and an attic storey above the main cornice. The plain limestone walls are pierced by unadorned windows in deep reveals. The foundations were constructed deep and strong enough in order to support a forty-story tower should the need arise in the future.

Federal Hall National Memorial
Distance: 0.3 mi Competitive Analysis
26 Wall St
New York, NY 10005

(212) 825-6990

Here on Wall Street, George Washington took the oath of office as our first President, and this site was home to the first Congress, Supreme Court, and Executive Branch offices. The current structure, a Customs House, later served as part of the US Sub-Treasury. Now, the building serves as a museum and memorial to our first President and the beginnings of the United States of America.

South Street Seaport Museum
Distance: 0.4 mi Competitive Analysis
12 Fulton St
New York, NY 10038

(212) 748-8600

I like to imagine Fulton and South Streets in 1812 when Peter Schermerhorn completed the 12 buildings that comprise Schermerhorn Row, when people came from all over New York to marvel at this row of Federal-style warehouses on the East River. In those days the piers were crowded with ships from all over the world discharging their cargoes of coffee, tea, cotton, molasses, and countless other trade goods upon the piers of South Street. The trade represented by these ships and the counting-houses, hotels, and warehouses of the South Street Seaport is the very trade that built the growing New York City and through it the United States of America. In the late 1960s, visionary preservationists set aside a collection of entire city blocks in the South Street Seaport district as an area worthy of care and attention. These blocks of early- to mid- nineteenth century buildings, coupled with a series of piers crowded with historic ships would tell the vital story of the formation and growth of New York, a city built on—and because of—its deep natural harbor and its connection through the Erie Canal to the inner states and territories of the new nation. Today, more than two hundred years after Schermerhorn Row was completed, New York is a very different place. The Row is no longer the largest building in the city; it is dwarfed in fact by the surrounding financial district. The piers are no longer crowded with ships, but that same deep-water harbor is seeing a renaissance of education, of commercial and ferry service, of oyster aquaculture, and of attention from New Yorkers. Indeed, now more than ever the story of the formation of New York—the story of a city built on its waterways—is critical to our city. This is not a dry history, but a living tale of growth, of sacrifice, and of opportunity. The story and its reverberations play out in the education programs aboard our schooners PIONEER and LETTIE G. HOWARD. They are carried in the hearts of the scores of volunteers who work regularly and without pay to preserve our tug W.O. DECKER and the mighty square-riggers PEKING and WAVERTREE. They burn brightly in the lamps of the lightship AMBROSE. Although Hurricane Sandy is behind us, the challenges we face are still daunting. However the very same spirit that led Schermerhorn and others to build, to grow, and to prosper in early New York will once again carry the day. For here we have a Museum, not of artifacts and buildings and ships, though we have those. Not of interpretive signs, galleries, and stories, though those abound as well. Here we have a museum of the people. A museum that thrives as the beating heart of the historic South Street Seaport district. Welcome to South Street Seaport Museum. Our dedicated staff and volunteers (who are educators, sailors, preservationists, and some of the finest humans on the planet) are ready to welcome you aboard our ships and into our galleries and shops. We work together toward the next successful chapter of our “little museum that could.” Please join us for a visit, join as a member, and join the ranks of the proud volunteers who take a firsthand role in the preservation of old New York and the building of new New York. I look forward to seeing you soon at South Street. Captain Jonathan Boulware Executive Director

NYC Ground Zero 9/11 Memorial!
Distance: 0.3 mi Competitive Analysis
World Trade Center
New York, NY 10004

Public Services and Government Near New York City Vietnam Veterans Memorial Plaza

Blahblah
Distance: 0.5 mi Competitive Analysis
222 Broadway
New York, NY 10038

(504) 669-8458

1 World Trade Center
Distance: 0.6 mi Competitive Analysis
Vesey - Church - West Streets
New York, NY 10006

(212) 667-8704

Anne Frank Center for Mutual Respect
Distance: 0.7 mi Competitive Analysis
44 Park Place
New York, NY 10007

(212) 431-7993

The Anne Frank Center for Mutual Respect educates the nation to fight harder for Anne Frank’s dream: An inclusive world in which mutual respect replaces hatred and its consequences. Our inspiring programs, tailored to youth and adults from every walk of life, train participants to recognize and stop prejudice even at its earliest stages. Through our work that honors Anne Frank’s diary and enduring legacy, the Anne Frank Center for Mutual Respect does more than respond to prejudice. We teach our nation to prevent it. The Anne Frank Center USA is a non-sectarian, educational organization, that is not-for-profit under the Internal Revenue Code Section {501 (c) (3)}. Contributions to the organization are tax deductible to the extent permitted by law.

Public Advocate For The City Of New York
Distance: 0.7 mi Competitive Analysis
1 Centre St
New York, NY 10007

(212) 669-7200

~ Vorrei Vivere A New York ~
Distance: 0.8 mi Competitive Analysis
New York City
New York, NY

FDNY Tower Ladder 1
Distance: 0.9 mi Competitive Analysis
100 Duane St
New York, NY 10007

(212) 570-1518

Manhattan District Attorney's Office
Distance: 1.0 mi Competitive Analysis
1 Hogan Pl
New York, NY 10013

(212) 335-9000

Freddy fazbear's pizza
Distance: 1.0 mi Competitive Analysis
Baxter St
New York, NY 12342342352

1-800-FAZ-FAZBEAR

vive les singes
Distance: 1.2 mi Competitive Analysis
47 Rue Du Commerce
Brooklyn, NY 59650

(062) 323-2332

Urban Meadow Community Garden Brooklyn, NY
Distance: 1.3 mi Competitive Analysis
34 President Street- Corner of President and Van Brunt Streets
Brooklyn, NY 11231

Forsyth street kids
Distance: 1.6 mi Competitive Analysis
176 Forsyth St
New York, NY 10002

(786) 508-4511