With fare evasion rampant, enforcement teams will use hand-held devices to see if riders actually paid to ride the bus.
This week’s properties are in South Harlem, on the Upper West Side and in Bay Terrace.
To cover the city’s evolving food scene, Luke Fortney relies on his curiosity, and an assortment of fermented dishes.
Columbia University researchers said that sensors detected a 2 percent increase in toxic particles in the air. M.T.A. officials disputed the report.
Lu Jianwang, a U.S. citizen, is accused of working on behalf of the Chinese government to target dissidents. A co-defendant has pleaded guilty.
For the second time in six months, protesters gathered outside Park East Synagogue, which was holding an event to promote real estate sales in Israel. A heavy police presence kept the two groups apart.
Yolaine Díaz, a fashion and beauty writer for People en Español, and her mother were killed in the blaze at an apartment building in Inwood, People magazine said.
The captain, James G. Wilson, was also filmed calling Democrats a “waste of human race.”
Steven Roth, the chief executive of Vornado, criticized Mayor Zohran Mamdani for singling out the billionaire Ken Griffin in his bid to make the wealthy pay more taxes in New York City.
Gusi focuses on Slavic and Mediterranean food, Bar Hugo provides another rooftop space and more restaurant news.
Models, designers, D.J.s and performers kept the night going into the early morning.
On the campus of Wagner College, a cutting from a chestnut tree has been planted. It once grew in Amsterdam outside Anne Frank’s window.
The name of the South Bronx store was H&R Hosiery, though nobody called it that. But it shaped street fashion, until the rent rose to $8,000 a month.
The Muslim Democratic Club was founded to increase political power among the city’s Muslims. Now some of its founders are the mayor’s top aides.
Hay una campaña anti-Bezos en las calles de Nueva York donde han descrito el acto como la “Gala Amazon Prime” o el “Baile de Bezos”.
New York’s mayor highlighted the seamstresses, tailors and other workers in the fashion industry.
“Es un luchador que se ha enfrentado a todos los retos de su vida con una fortaleza inquebrantable, y está luchando con ese mismo nivel de fortaleza”, dijo un portavoz.
Rudy Giuliani, the former mayor of New York City, has been hospitalized in Florida. A spokesman said the 81-year-old is ”in critical but stable condition.”
The fire, at a six-story apartment building in the Inwood neighborhood, also displaced more than 100 residents, officials said.
The benefit for the Costume Institute of the Metropolitan Museum of Art raked in $31 million last year. Critics say it celebrates wealth and celebrity.
For 32 years, Gerald DeCock has carved out of a life in the Hotel Chelsea, buying art supplies across the street and never, ever cooking. Now, he may have to move.
Later this month, riders on the weekend will be able to travel directly from Hoboken to the World Trade Center for the first time in nearly 25 years.
The Key Biscayne property has views of the Miami skyline. In London, a mansion sold for $358 million, and in Monaco a penthouse sold for $550 million.
Protesters have found a perfect foil in Amazon’s founder, the gala’s lead sponsor this year.
Una de las presencias más esperadas es la de Beyoncé. Es copresidenta junto con Nicole Kidman, Venus Williams y la directora de contenidos de Condé Nast, Anna Wintour.
A spokesman for the former mayor of New York City said Mr. Giuliani was critical but stable.
Protesters clashed with the police outside Wyckoff Heights Medical Center, where federal immigration agents brought a detainee for evaluation and later dragged him to a waiting car.
A gaggle of former and current Vogue employees convened for a Saturday night screening of “The Devil Wears Prada 2.” The dress code for the evening? Interview chic.
A Brooklyn general store that sells Taiwanese imports was pummeled by tariffs. A rebate would help, but the confusion still lingers.
A spring walk near Prospect Park, an S. Klein bargain and more reader tales of New York City in this week’s Metropolitan Diary.
A battle in one New York neighborhood echoes struggles unfolding in school systems across the nation that are experiencing a decline in students.
Julian Hall y Adri Mehmeti son dos adolescentes de Nueva York que están viviendo un sueño: aún no tienen edad para beber, pero se espera que le hagan frente a Messi.
Mayor Zohran Mamdani's plan to connect the plaza to Prospect Park would expand pedestrian spaces, add bike lanes and reroute cars to improve traffic flow in the area.
The tax proposal is being held up as a generational attempt to make the ultrawealthy pay more to society and potentially raise $500 million a year for New York City.
The Paul Robeson Theater and Stuyvesant Mansion, formerly owned by the trailblazing physician Dr. Josephine English, are facing a court-ordered sale.
Mayor Zohran Mamdani wants to raise income taxes on New York City’s millionaires. Tax increases elsewhere have not led to an exodus, but some worry the city is reaching a tipping point.
A group of students at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn is meeting up to mend clothes that might otherwise be thrown out.
Jessica Mann, who accused Mr. Weinstein of raping her at a hotel in 2013, is testifying against him for the third time. It seems to be taking a toll on her.
In the 1970s and ’80s, Stephanie Chernikowski, who has died at 84, shot bands like the Ramones and Blondie at CBGB and other downtown clubs.
She captured the radiant chaos at New York City clubs like CBGB in the 1970s, when bands like the Ramones, Blondie and the Patti Smith Group were emerging.
The police said the boy was crossing the street when he was hit by a driver making a left turn.
Chris Larsen, who hails from California, plans to spend $3.5 million to help Alex Bores, a New York congressional candidate at the center of a proxy war over A.I. regulation.
City leaders and state lawmakers are pushing Gov. Kathy Hochul to raise taxes on the wealthy, and they have floated several options.
A Brooklyn case has ignited a debate around the prevalence of deed theft, in which scammers fraudulently take ownership of people’s homes. Here’s what we know.
Patricia Hochhauser will ride on Sunday in the Five Boro Bike Tour. It requires helmets, but she is particularly committed to their use after a serious scooter accident.
The Metropolitan Museum and the party that has supported its fashion wing may be entering a new era.
Lawyers representing the abuse survivors warned their clients that the archdiocese would most likely file for bankruptcy if they did not agree to the settlement.
King Charles III and Queen Camilla had a ceremonial farewell at the White House before attending a block party in Front Royal, Va.
Thousands of children were unable to finish annual standardized tests, the second year in a row when technological issues emerged.
New York apartment buzzers are loud, often broken and haven’t been upgraded since the ’70s. But would we have it any other way?
As Veselka goes back to 24-hour service, these three New York City restaurants never stopped carrying the torch.
Anna Wintour, Martha Stewart and others greeted the royal couple at the King’s Trust Gala, during their official state visit to the United States.
City and state officials want speed-limiting devices installed in the cars of drivers who get more than 16 speeding tickets in a year, in hopes of preventing injuries and deaths.
This week’s properties are Mott Haven, Manhattan Valley and Turtle Bay.
Photos of the 1940s lost-and-found office for the subway show that straphangers of the era left some surprising items on the trains.
The mayor’s plan to restructure the way the police handle mentally ill people has lessened the standing of an office that combats domestic and gender-based violence.
Gwyneth Paltrow’s healthy-eating enterprise is just one of several recent Los Angeles exports to a rival city with its own ideas about what’s good.
“When I love something, I urgently must put it in someone’s hands,” says the novelist, whose new “Last Night in Brooklyn” is an ode to old-style friendship.
She has a new podcast, stand-up hour and political organizing group, and is raising a 4-year-old daughter. But don’t worry, she still loves weed.
During their state visit, King Charles III and Queen Camilla stopped by New York City, where they laid flowers at the 9/11 memorial, fed chickens, read to children and attended a charity event.
Lo que empezó en Japón como una comida rápida y emocionante para la clase trabajadora, se ha transformado en un elaborado capricho para comensales adinerados en otros lugares.
King Charles III and Queen Camilla laid flowers at the Sept. 11 memorial before stopping by an urban farm, the New York Public Library, a business event and a gala.
Mayor Zohran Mamdani and King Charles did not meet privately. But if they had, the mayor said, he probably would have raised the issue of the Koh-i-Noor Diamond.
El choque entre el papa León XIV y el presidente de EE. UU. revela una búsqueda de autoridad moral en tiempos de incertidumbre.
Standing near dozens of repatriated artifacts, officials from the countries celebrated efforts that have led to the return of thousands of artworks to Italy.
Julian Hall and Adri Mehmeti are New York City teenagers living the dream: not old enough to drink but still expected to hold their own against Messi.
Instead of paying $150 for NJ Transit tickets to get to the stadium, some Europeans online are suggesting a scenic stroll through New Jersey’s interstates and swamps.
The New York Police Department urged commuters to use public transportation during the royal visit on Wednesday.
From a barbecue at Camp David to a college football game, the British monarch has experienced many American traditions over decades of visiting the United States.
The city plans to widen the median on an 11-block stretch of the boulevard, removing two traffic lanes, to provide space where people can stroll or linger.
The king and queen of Britain arrive in New York today on the third day of their state visit. Camilla is bringing a special gift for the library.
Jack Schlossberg, the grandson of John F. Kennedy, is among a slate of Democrats seeking to replace Representative Jerrold Nadler of New York.
A decades-old fight over a parking lot reserved for judges in Brooklyn has picked up steam with a new generation of combatants.
Our latest batch of reviews includes a new Indian restaurant in Park Slope, a pizza parlor-slash-bar in Bushwick and a Las Vegas import for downtown Manhattan.
After attending a ceremony at the memorial in Lower Manhattan, the royal couple is scheduled to visit a Harlem nonprofit, the New York Public Library’s main branch and Christie’s.
Sally Goldenberg covers New York City politics and government for The Times, attending to a network of sources more than 20 years in the making.
The City Council special election pitting Lindsey Boylan, backed by Mayor Zohran Mamdani, against Carl Wilson, a community activist, was not officially called. But the mayor said Mr. Wilson had won.
Timothy Brown said he had been humiliated and injured after he was punched and kicked by police during a wrongful arrest that was caught on video.
Erwin Bankowski and Karolina Bankowska, of New Jersey, commissioned a Polish artist to create counterfeit artworks that sold for a total of over $2 million.
As Aqueduct Racetrack winds down, Resorts World opens the first full-scale commercial casino in Queens, with live table games, dealers and cards.
Jessica Mann testified, for the third time in six years, about the day she says Mr. Weinstein raped her in a Midtown Manhattan hotel.
Damon Jones is among more than 30 people who were charged last fall in two sweeping indictments that targeted illegal gambling involving current and former N.B.A. players.
Pizza Studio Tamaki will bring the charred and bubbled crust of Tokyo-style Neapolitan pizza to the East Village, seafood with art in Williamsburg and more restaurant news.
The 30th Street shelter next to Bellevue Hospital has served homeless men for decades.
The resonance of the pontiff-versus-president imbroglio reveals a hunger for moral authority at a time that feels deeply disoriented and spiritually thin.
The United Parcel Service will not deliver inside two buildings on Staten Island where its drivers were assaulted decades ago. Residents are suing.
Cuando su hijo de 11 años desapareció el año pasado, Jacqueline Pritchett se negó incluso a reconocer su existencia.
Families in New York City expressed concerns about the rapid adoption of the technology. The schools chancellor also canceled a plan to close two Upper West Side schools.
Guy Rivera faces the rest of his life in prison for fatally shooting Detective Jonathan Diller and attempting to kill his partner when they asked him to get out of his car.
The U.S.S. Monitor took part in an important Civil War battle. Near where it was built, a battle over a development project is heating up.
Angela Donadelle lives with her son Christopher Jones in an East Harlem complex she fought to keep affordable because they wanted to stay in the city.
Lizzo bought the home four years ago. Jeff Green, the N.B.A. star, also sold a mansion in Miami, and Jesse McCartney listed one in L.A.
A shelter for men near Bellevue Hospital is closing. It is a symbol of an approach to homelessness that the Mamdani administration hopes to leave behind.
A new statewide policy detailing when utilities can stop service for unpaid bills during heat waves has resulted in weaker rules for New York City.
The New York jail complex uses video games as part of its strategy to reduce violence with programming for good behavior.
A Manhattan friendship endures, a clown to the rescue and more reader tales of New York City in this week’s Metropolitan Diary.
When Jacqueline Pritchett’s 11-year-old son, Jacob, vanished last year, she refused to acknowledge that he existed. Her life is as mysterious as his disappearance.
Some Bellevue Hospital officials feared having to disclose patients’ immigration status. They will get care elsewhere at the hospital, administrators say.
Economists and real estate agents are calling London’s taxation of wealthy property owners a cautionary tale for New York, where leaders have endorsed a second-home tax.
The same progressive South Asian networks that helped elect Zohran Mamdani as mayor in New York are mobilizing against Jenifer Rajkumar, a Queens assemblywoman.
Zoomers in finance are posting day-in-the-life videos on TikTok, alarming compliance officers. Should Wall Street reconsider its social media policies?
Mayor Zohran Mamdani has been invited to join King Charles III during his visit to New York, but the mayor’s office has not confirmed if they will appear together.
Titans of influence filled the Deutsche Bank Center in Manhattan on Thursday night for an evening of selfies and self-congratulation.
A federal appeals court threw out a conviction that said Akayed Ullah provided “material support” to ISIS, putting a prosecutorial tool under the microscope.
The office will seek to crack down on the practice, in which people fraudulently take ownership of others’ homes.
The veto, Zohran Mamdani’s first as mayor, scraps a bill that would have compelled the Police Department to release plans on how it intends to manage protesters near educational facilities.
In 2009, the City Council decided that roll-down metal gates could no longer be solid. The law goes into effect this summer, after 17 years.
In a special election on Manhattan’s West Side, home to major L.G.B.T.Q. sites and institutions and many gay residents, a straight person could win for the first time since 1991.
Daniel Goldman is pledging at least $1 million of his own money, and possibly millions more, in hopes of fighting off a primary challenge from Brad Lander in New York City.
The federal Department of Education said it would begin a civil rights investigation, reviewing teachings by a group known as N.Y.C. Educators for Palestine.
Fries are perfectly good on their own, but they’re even better with toppings. Here are three places to get yours loaded.
Related Companies struck a deal with Eric Adams to have New York City finance a costly platform to facilitate new housing. Mayor Zohran Mamdani said advancing the deal was not a priority.
Falcon Cam at a Manhattan office building revealed the first peregrine falcon to hatch there in years.
Two homes, both described as the area’s oldest, are up for sale. A search through 200 years of deeds reveals their true origins.
With New York City facing a multibillion-dollar deficit, Mayor Zohran Mamdani is exploring ways to delay the city’s payments to municipal pension funds.
As “springstagrammers” descend on the island during peak bloom, dozens of locals have volunteered to politely deter visitors from damaging the trees.
This week’s properties are in Yorkville, Murray Hill and Dumbo.
Police had recovered fingerprints after the murders in 1993, which took place while the victims’ child was in the next room. But they identified William Antonio Solis as a suspect only last year.
The Independent fair will push boundaries, featuring designs by Rei Kawakubo and Comme des Garçons that blur the line between fashion and sculpture.
The order pauses New York City’s plan to shift the intake center for homeless men from a building near Bellevue Hospital to one in the East Village.
Modern Love in miniature, featuring reader-submitted stories of no more than 100 words.
Rabbi Shalom Landau has found a large new audience online, some of which isn’t Jewish. He sticks to ancient wisdom and hopes for the best.
A 7-month-old girl, Kaori Patterson-Moore, was fatally shot on a sidewalk in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, on April 1. The bullet was meant for her father, the police said.
City Councilman Chi Ossé and others were detained in Brooklyn at a demonstration against a practice that has led to the eviction of many longtime homeowners.
There are 225 electrical substations in the subway system. Some of them have been around for close to 100 years.
After losing her legs, a New York Times food writer began to feel like a tourist in her home city. So, facing her fears, she met it like one.
Sarah Zames blends contemporary designs with family treasures in her Brooklyn apartment.
Migrant arrest rates have been high in places like Long Island, where federal agents benefit from stealth and the aid of local politicians.
In a host of books and articles, he attacked conventional ideas on subjects including the battle of the sexes and the usefulness of high school math.
On April 9, Zohran Mamdani posed for a picture with the New York Mets mascots. Since the joyous photo op, the Mets have not won a game.
The police also disbanded a team within the unit after two of its detectives were seen on tape beating a man in Brooklyn last week.
Wainwright’s Tavern brings comforts and house accounts to Third Avenue, Cleo offers a new spot for rotisserie chicken downtown and more restaurant news.
A report from the Aspen Institute has found that the demand to play soccer is soaring, but parts of Brooklyn, the Bronx and Queens lack access to fields.
Harvey Weinstein is accused of raping an actress in a Manhattan hotel more than a decade ago. After an overturned conviction and a hung jury, he will face the charge once again.
A lawsuit challenges the Mamdani administration’s declaration that closing the 30th Street Shelter was an emergency and was not subject to public notice and other requirements.
Carmine G. Agnello Jr. had pleaded guilty to fraudulently collecting more than $1 million in small-business loans, some of which he invested in cryptocurrency.
Mr. Craig and Rachel Weisz had owned their Cobble Hill home for almost a decade. Ms. Allen’s sale in Carroll Gardens comes amid the breakup of her marriage.
To make a living off his designs, Ari Serrano combs through thrift stores for supplies and finds opportunities for those who can make a name online.
Children from New York schools are consistently winning national chess championships, and programs dedicated to teaching young people the game are booming.
A porter found a woman’s diamond and sapphire ring, valued at $7,700. It once belonged to her mother.
What to know about this year’s celebration, including the return of a superstar last seen on the Met carpet 10 years ago.
The new proposal would make Grand Army Plaza more friendly to pedestrians. It was all the talk at the local farmers’ market on Saturday.
A reluctant move to Manhattan, an inside joke at a Bronx coffee cart and more reader tales of New York City in this week’s Metropolitan Diary.
En “Famesick”, su segundo libro de memorias, Dunham explora, con detalles ingeniosos y desgarradores, los estragos de la fama temprana y de vivir con una enfermedad crónica.
The meeting on Saturday, the men’s first public appearance together, showcased a critical part of Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s agenda: universal child care.
Stars and luminaries honored the dance company’s 100th anniversary with dinner, performances and a champagne toast at the New York Public Library.
With a new tax proposal, the threat of a building workers’ strike and Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s shunning of the Met Gala, the city’s wealth gap was on full display.
The bureau has informed high schools, colleges and volleyball clubs in the New York City area that the coach, Edgar Lazaro Castillo, is being investigated in connection with sexual assault.
As state leaders determine how much owners of high-priced second homes in New York City may have to pay, they are also wrestling with opaque L.L.C.-ownership issues.