It’s the first death since 2014 in the 13.1-mile run from Prospect Park to Coney Island. It was not immediately clear whether heat had played a role.
Sandra Velasquez strolls through Green-Wood Cemetery, pals around with her partner and connects with other female entrepreneurs.
A new documentary directed by Stefan Forbes centers on a 1973 hostage negotiation led by a police officer known for his pioneering techniques.
This week’s properties are in Manhattan Valley, on the Upper West Side and in Bushwick.
“This is someone who had hate in their heart, soul and mind,” the Buffalo police commissioner said about the attacker at the Tops supermarket.
The girl had cuts and bruises to her head and bite marks on her body when investigators arrived at her Crown Heights home on Sunday.
Recent residential sales in New York City and the region.
As the United States marks one million Covid-19 deaths, Times journalists reflect on the one story or moment from the pandemic that will stay with them forever.
They aided investigators after the worst subway attack in decades. Will that be enough to persuade immigration authorities to give them visas or asylum?
Target Margin Theater stages an enchanting riff on “One Thousand and One Nights” inside an old Brooklyn garage. Tea and pastries included, blankets welcome.
Plus: eerie fashion photography, a piercing studio and more recommendations from T Magazine.
Here’s what you need to know at the end of the day.
After a two-year hiatus, the Robot Heart party, normally held during Burning Man, made its return to glory and debut in the Big Apple.
Aaron Nathaniel Jr., who was only 14 when he killed Timi Oyebola, 16, was sentenced after delays that frustrated families on both sides.
Recent residential sales in New York City and the region.
For this Park Slope dog walker, it’s all about community.
From “anti-monuments” to ephemeral sand portraits, four art exhibitions encourage viewers to slow down and take stock of our pandemic losses.
Our critic’s favorite venues, from mega arenas showcasing Top 40 pop stars to quirky clubs featuring Klezmer quartets.
Keeping cultured on the cheap is easy if you know where and when to go in this city.
If you’re in need of a few laughs, here are some of the top places to find them in the city.
The man known as Otoniel is accused of smuggling tons of cocaine and assassinating police officers and civic leaders.
Shawn Williams, falsely accused of a 1993 murder in Brooklyn, won the largest settlement so far thanks to the alleged misconduct of a once-renowned homicide detective.
Isaiah “Toothtaker” Camacho was a star in the underground tattoo industry, even as sexual assault accusations against him piled up.
A new pizzeria in Brooklyn strays from the slice-shop template.
Not far from where his parents ran a Brooklyn pizzeria, Salvatore Carlino makes his pies. Some he invented, others are tributes to classic styles.
Activity in the city’s housing courts, which used to process more eviction cases than any other city in the nation, is rising after a pandemic moratorium.
In the past year, road races have debuted a nonbinary category, typically with around two dozen or fewer such competitors at each event.
The Argentine chef and artist Fernando Aciar and the French creative director Anna Polonsky treated friends to a meal that felt as personal as their newly renovated home.
This week’s available properties are in Greenwich Village, Turtle Bay and Fort Greene.
Royal culture, historic sites and traditional British experiences are catnip to Americans who have missed traveling across the pond. A visitors’ guide.
Timmy Klein, who died in a blaze this week, will be buried three years after delivering a eulogy for a comrade who died in the line of duty.
Frankie Light is one of the new breed of “YouTube polyglots.” He taught himself Mandarin, but can he earn a living making small talk with strangers?
Our critics and writers have selected noteworthy cultural events to experience in New York City.
El Museo del Barrio is presenting a retrospective of Raphael Montañez Ortiz’s works to honor the 88-year-old artist and reinforce the institution’s roots.
“I find it really hard to admit that I’m in pain,” said a 14-year-old whose school friend was fatally shot.
At least 40 children and teenagers have been shot this year, taking a toll on young people whose lives have already been disrupted by the pandemic.
Five other firefighters were injured in the three-alarm fire in Canarsie, the Fire Department said. Authorities were working to identify another body found inside the home.
New York State is mapping out plans to license venues for on-site recreational marijuana use, but some places have already figured out how to get the ball rolling.
Two first-time buyers took a budget of up to $700,000 across the border from Bushwick. Which option would you choose?
Passengers rushed out of a smoke-filled N train in Sunset Park, Brooklyn, after a man opened fire during rush hour on Tuesday morning.
I was at a homeless encampment when it was taken down by the police.
We spoke with residents in one of the largest communities of Russian-speakers in this country about the invasion of Ukraine.
A longtime renter looked around Bedford-Stuyvesant for the best deal he could find, focusing on condos rather than co-ops, so he could have “more control over what I wanted to do to my place.” Here’s what he found.
In need of work-from-home space and a quieter street, a couple tested how far their money would go in central Brooklyn and across the Hudson River. Here’s what they found.
Coming from ‘a wild unicorn of an apartment’ in Williamsburg, this first-time buyer sought a studio or one-bedroom with vintage character — but without vintage problems. Here’s what she found.
Selections from the current Weekend section, including a review of the Brooklyn Museum exhibition “Andy Warhol: Revelation.”
A couple from Mexico City knew that if they were going to buy, ‘it had to be now’ — before interest rates went up. Here’s what they found in Brooklyn for less than $2 million.
When his landlord raised the rent during the pandemic, this Brooklyn renter decided it was time to buy. Here’s what he found for less than $1 million in Carroll Gardens.
Over eight weeks this summer we documented nightlife as New Yorkers returned to the city’s deeply missed party scene. It ended up being a brief window of freedom, a hint at what we hope will be waiting for us on the other side of the pandemic.
A young couple, realizing they weren’t going back to their workplaces ‘probably ever,’ set a $500,000 budget for a two-bedroom in the Sunset Park area of Brooklyn. Here’s what they found.
After putting off a purchase to invest in her business, a longtime renter saw an opportunity to buy a place in Brooklyn with the amenities she had always wanted. Here’s what she found.
After splitting rent with roommates for years, a couple researched the city’s housing lotteries and found that they qualified for many places.
With the city shut down last summer, a couple took their $4,000 budget to Williamsburg, Brooklyn, in search of a place where they could work from home in peace. Here’s what they found.
Two days ago a New York City bus crashed into a home, injuring 16 people.
This is the first season that Barclays Center in Brooklyn is home to both the New York Liberty and the Brooklyn Nets. And the arena recently needed to make a quick transformation.
The city is ramping up a program to vaccinate people in select subway stations as a way to boost the city's vaccination rate.
For their first purchase together, a young couple sought a place they could make their own — no ‘cookie-cutter doorman buildings.’ Here’s what they found.
Figuring she could get a better deal as rents fell, a young Manhattanite cast a wide net for ‘something with a door,’ not too far from work. Here’s what she found.
Families came out to Coney Island on Friday, looking for rollercoaster rides and funnel cakes, for the first time in 18 months.
A young couple joined forces to get through 2020 and beyond, but would they find what they wanted in her East Side neighborhood or his beloved Williamsburg? Here’s where they landed.
For their first New York purchase, a couple scoured their beloved Williamsburg neighborhood for a quiet place with good light and more space for their growing household. Here’s what they found.
More than a hundred workers marched on Friday in support of a package of bills that would provide financial assistance to workers who have so far been left out of government programs during the pandemic.
Squeezed and priced out of Windsor Terrace, a family of four looked south to Midwood and Marine Park — or maybe even Staten Island.
Seeking an upgrade for their growing children — and their voluminous stuff — a couple toured the townhouses of Bay Ridge. Which home would you choose?
Today’s Brooklyn map is a relic of a sweeping 19th-century effort to renumber every building and rename dozens of streets. The saga revealed how decisions made by bureaucrats can leave an imprint on city life more than a century later.
The famous holiday displays in Dyker Heights are attracting smaller crowds, but some homeowners are determined to bring cheer.
Months ago, our architecture critic invited a few people to suggest modest strolls around places meaningful to them. Here’s where they went.
Mr. Jin is accused of engaging in a conspiracy to censor Zoom users in the United States.
As the pandemic lockdown cleared the roads and as governments instituted popular programs to keep restaurants and small businesses alive, communities have gotten a glimpse at what the city is like when the streets are reimagined. New Yorkers don’t...
The pandemic compressed live music onto screens, and Black Lives Matter protests brought it back to the streets. What will it all look like, and sound like, in 2021?
For their first place together, a couple joined forces (and budgets) to find a place with some sunlight and enough space to work from home.
This first-time buyer searched new developments in central Brooklyn, looking for details that would set one apart. Here are the options she considered.
Brooklynites have a long tradition of passing along books. But what ends up in giveaway piles these days speaks volumes about our current fraught moment.
After failing to find a suitable Manhattan apartment, this growing family became ‘the last people to the Brooklyn party.’ Which of these Williamsburg options would you choose?
The counting of absentee ballots is slow and unglamorous. ‘Is this one fine?’ a worker asked in Brooklyn.
To find the right place for themselves and their young son, this couple considered the pros and cons of various building types. Which option would you choose?
Ashleigh Kaneski figured she couldn’t afford to buy a one-bedroom in the city, but she could keep her tiny rental and invest in a house in the Catskills. Then she had second thoughts.
The check (and the book, and the sandals, and everything else) is in the mail.
The check (and the book, and the sandals, and everything else) is in the mail.
After leaving Queens for Long Island, Paolo and Christian Acquista felt stranded. So they plotted their return to the city, this time to Brooklyn. Which of these options would you choose?
For their first purchase together, a couple searched their old Brooklyn neighborhood for a little fresh air — and maybe a second bedroom. Which of these options would you choose?
With about $1 million to spend, the former renters were hoping to upsize to a two-bedroom with two bathrooms, good closet space and a view that wasn’t a brick wall.
Herman James has set up shop under a pergola near Strawberry Fields, where he has provided free haircuts since May.
Tired of living in a building with a dormlike atmosphere, one couple went in search of a more residential setup. Here’s what they found.
Thousands of New York renters left the city because of the coronavirus, and rents have finally started to go down.
After a couple of years in Seattle, a New York family returned to hunt for a conveniently situated house with some character. Here’s where they wound up.
The police in Brooklyn were quicker Wednesday to enforce the clampdown than they had been before, moving swiftly to disperse demonstrators from rainy city streets and to arrest those who failed to clear out.
For their first home together, a young couple sought the best roof deck and gym they could find on a budget. Here’s where they wound up.
With billions of people staying home, the world is reinventing the weekend.
For about $1,000 each, they hoped to find a decent place near a good bagel store. Now they’re stuck there as they wait out the lockdown.
After years of renting, two young doctors hoped to buy something in their beloved Clinton Hill, but found better options elsewhere. Here’s where they landed.
The energy, the traffic, the crowds are all gone. Only the vacant streets remain, waiting for the actors to return to the stage.
In recent years, the area has seen staggering changes, with proliferating arts organizations, housing and amenities. But that hasn’t come cheap.
The boy’s death comes at a time when biking fatalities across New York City have surged. So far, 25 cyclists have been killed in 2019.
At Sakib, the menu reads like an exhaustive listing of street food from the Levant.
A model Brooklyn program to keep young people out of jail runs afoul of the mayor and the police.
Patricia Park piqued Brett Taylor’s interest with a Match.com profile that cited a love of West Coast India pale ales.
Something grand is happening in Brooklyn, though probably not this season.
Changes to middle school enrollment in parts of Brooklyn and Manhattan could force City Hall to take action on school segregation.
The program is the first one to be closed as part of the city’s escalating effort to stem the country’s largest measles outbreak in decades.