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About New York
New
York City, NY,
is also known as the “Big Apple”. With over 8 million
residents (2000
Census data), NYC
maintains the title of the most populous U.S.
city. Immigrants from more than 180 countries comprise
this cosmopolitan city, and despite its diverse culture and
massive population, NYC has gradually become one of
America’s safest large cities. Located in the heart of
the massive New York Metropolitan Area, population 22 million,
New York City is part of one of the world’s largest urban
conglomerations. The boroughs of the Bronx,
Brooklyn,
Manhattan,
Queens
and Staten
Island comprise New York City proper.
The Bronx is the home of the New
York Yankees and is the birthplace of hip-hop
music and culture. Brooklyn,
with nearly 2.5 million residents, is NYC’s largest borough
with a thriving business district and massive residential
areas with a large concentration of natives. Manhattan
serves as NYC’s primary business center with buildings such
as the Chrysler
Building, Empire State Building and Rockefeller
Center gracing the world’s most popular skyline. Midtown
Manhattan is home to the ill-fated Twin
Towers of the World Trade Center and is the future home of
the 1776-foot One
World Trade Center Freedom Tower, which is scheduled for
completion in 2010. Queens,
NYC’s most diverse borough, is geographically the largest.
The renowned Shea
Stadium, home to the New
York Mets is in Queens. Staten Island is a growing
suburban area that is significantly isolated compared to
NYC’s other boroughs. The renowned Staten
Island Ferry is here.
New York Harbor, one of the world’s finest natural
ports, and the Erie
Canal played major roles in NYC’s early economic
development. Today, New York City is among the world’s
global cities such as London,
Paris and Tokyo,
with an estimated Gross Metropolitan Product of nearly $500
billion. New York City holds a central position of
culture, entertainment, finance and politics internationally
and is home to the United
Nations. Significant financial districts
within the city include NASDAQ,
the New York
Stock Exchange and Wall
Street. NYC boasts more Fortune
500 companies than any other U.S.
city. These include such prestigious companies as Bristol-Myers
Squibb, Pfizer
and Time
Warner. Four out of five New York City commuters
primarily travel by bus
or subway.
New York City operates the nation’s largest public
school systems and is home to more than 1,000 private
schools. The City
University of New York (CUNY), the country’s largest
urban university system, serves NYC, with numerous campuses
spread throughout the five boroughs. NYC is also home to
such fine higher learning facilities as Columbia
University, Fordham
University, Manhattan
College, New
York University and the Juilliard
School Renowned institutions such as Memorial
Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, Rockefeller
University and Weill
Cornell Medical College represent NYC’s status as a
center for academic medicine.
New York City, also called the “City That Never Sleeps”,
offers a fast-paced lifestyle and an astounding array of
cultural activities to suit one’s every whim. The
City’s 39 million tourists flock to popular destinations
such as the Brooklyn
Bridge, Empire State Building, Greenwich
Village, Herald
Square, the Statue
of Liberty, Radio
City Music Hall and Times
Square. NYC also offers unparalleled cultural
opportunities through its galleries, museums, shopping venues,
theaters and diverse dining experiences. Visitors and
residents alike enjoy more than 28,000 acres of pristine parkland
throughout the city, including the world famous Central
Park.
New York City, NY
remains a dynamic metropolis with unparalleled opportunities
in the academic, business and entertainment sectors.
NYC’s diverse population affords residents unique choices of
neighborhoods and schools that have excellent potential for
living and working.
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