Living In
Lenox Hill: A Neighborhood of Amenities
By AILEEN JACOBSON
The new subway line adds one more perk to an area filled with them.
The seven-room residence where the elusive actress liked to be left alone is for sale.
The new subway line adds one more perk to an area filled with them.
Stars turn out to celebrate the new bittersweet comedy starring Mr. Harrelson about an easily provoked loner.
The photographer Sasha Arutyunova took photographs of New York City during its daybreak hours, before it applied its makeup or donned its power suit.
The rowdy, six-day long Busojaras Festival, taking place two hours from Budapest, welcomes spring with a bang — and a bonfire.
A cocktail party and dinner to celebrate a new Dior boutique and new collection at Saks.
In this Text to Text, we pair Hopper’s “Room in New York” with Dahl’s “Lamb to the Slaughter” and ask, What truths are buried in silence?
Events were held this past week for the Art Production Fund, the Williamstown Theater Festival, Citymeals on Wheels and Human Rights Watch.
A Westchester town with acres of horse farms and open land.
What dangers would a large snowstorm have presented to city-dwellers 129 years ago that it wouldn’t pose today?
The designers behind the Italian brand Blazé Milano mine childhood passions to produce a line of one-of-a-kind jackets.
The British painter, who won the Turner Prize in 1985, was one of the most admired artists of the postwar period.
The family-run Holtermann’s Bakery on Staten Island offers staples from bygone eras like Pullman bread and meltaway cake.
David Vades Joseph, who grew up in Harlem, prefers to photograph the neighborhood as he knew it, rather than its newer elements.
Benefits were held recently for the School of American Ballet, Anthology Film Archives, Atlantic Theater Company and the dance and arts collective MoveOpolis.
Deviled eggs, deep-fried corn on the cob and scrapple honor the chef’s roots at this restaurant in Windsor Terrace, Brooklyn.
The designer of a new landmark building is suing over copyright infringement, describing an entrenched system where power can trump sanctity of law.
The Frugal Family heads to Thailand and learns why a surprising number of people travel abroad to get fillings and crowns, whitening and implants.
This Fairfield neighborhood with a historic district offers good value as buyers’ tastes have shifted to areas closer to downtown and the beach.
V Magazine hosted an intimate dinner on the final night of fashion month.
Thousands of affordable rental apartments are planned or are under construction in the Bronx, some with perks like rooftop farms and concert halls.
Finding glimpses of red in unexpected places.
See our favorite looks spotted between the shows.
The photographer Brian Young has compiled images of straphangers from that year in a new book.
A restaurant in Ridgewood, Queens, features shelves of groceries, a shrine to Egyptian history and fish from a chef who once worked by the docks.
The archive offers glimpses of Reed’s life as both a cultural A-lister and a working musician surviving the daily grind.
With its European market-town vibe and proximity to Manhattan, the neighborhood has long been attractive. Soon it will benefit from a new three-acre park and other projects.
On the day of his first speech to Congress, a new president rips up the script and opens the door to an unexpected compromise on immigration policy.
The folk singer accompanied the release of a new album with a workshop for convicts and a show at the Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Ossining, N.Y.
Also the Purim Ball and a silent auction for the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender Community Center.
What’s essential to Dave Malloy, the composer of “Natasha, Pierre & the Great Comet of 1812,” and his wife, the writer Eliza Bent? Stuffed animals.
A new photography exhibition at the Museum of the City of New York traces the Muslim experience here from the 1940s to the present.
Two dozen of Neel’s portraits, at David Zwirner, concentrates on her relationships with fellow Harlemites, most of them black, Latin American or Asian.
Fernando Garcia and Laura Kim shuttle between their two studios in the days before their fall/winter 2017 show.
A restaurant in Woodside, Queens, trades in the keyed-up spicing of the Himalayas.
Carlsberg’s decision to vacate its brewery gave Copenhagen an opportunity to regenerate a neighborhood, and meet a target to become a carbon-neutral city.
The industry is embracing technology, and finding new ways to pare the labor force. But as jobs go away, what of presidential promises to bring them back?
When it comes to the time and expense associated with raising a show dog, let alone a Westminster award winner, the sky’s the limit.
The photographer behind “Vista Manhattan: Views From New York City’s Finest Residences” on what it’s like to shoot what most people never get to see.
Recent events included the Viennese Opera Ball, a gala for the Human Rights Campaign and the Black & White Panda Ball
Our favorite looks from a week of street style.
Bathing, brushing and hugging are all in a day’s work for owners at the annual competition.
A family restaurant in Bensonhurst, Brooklyn, serves the pungent cooking of Koryo Saram, descendants of Koreans who were exiled to Central Asia.
Since its revitalization began in 1999, the Westchester County village has added shopping and luxury housing, and crime is down.
Marc Jacobs unveiled a new beauty line with Ms. Crawford’s 15-year-old daughter, and VFiles took over the downtown club S.O.B.’s
Bjarne Melgaard’s new multidisciplinary exhibition involves a drugged-up puppet, pigs wearing jewelry — and a designer-clothing free-for-all.
The fashion tribe celebrated Valentine’s Day with a cocktail party for Zac Posen, a caviar dinner for Moncler, and a loud party for Baja East.
Cats at Westminster? While some fur may have been ruffled and human hackles raised, the felines don’t seem to care.
For the first time, cats shared space — peacefully — with dogs at the Meet the Breeds event preceding the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show.
Retirees who want to stay active and productive — and indulge a passion — are setting up small farms around the country.
Despite the weather, winter is prime baseball season in New Jersey, where professionals like Mike Trout train with younger players.
Fire escapes are an integral part of New York City’s streetscape.
Benefits and galas were held last week for: Woman’s Day, the Society of Memorial Sloan Kettering, Waterkeeper Alliance and Lycée Français de New York.
A Broadway actress on what matters most at home: quiet and light. Mostly light.
New York Fashion Week kicks off with parties for Rag & Bone, and Bergdorf’s Nikelab.
Moments from the shows of Brock Collection, Nicholas K, Desigual and Erin Fetherston on the first day of New York Fashion Week.
amfAR held its annual gala at the start of New York Fashion Week.
RollerJam USA is the only indoor, year-round roller skating rink in New York.
Great Bear Lake in Canada is the first Unesco Biosphere Reserve led by an indigenous community. They guard it as if it were the last hope for humanity. They may have a point.
The culturally diverse Long Island village on the edge of Queens offers an easy commute and a quiet place to come home to.
The store, the oldest family-owned tofu and noodle shop in New York, cites increasing competition, a shrinking customer base and a generational shift.
A sophisticated, late supper at Mr. Chow’s indicated just how far Out of Order had come since Dorian Grinspan founded it five years ago.
Wednesday’s temperatures reached 62 degrees in New York City, but don’t get used to it. Up to 12 inches of snow could hit the region on Thursday.
Tom Brady rallied the Patriots from a 28-3 deficit in the second half to defeat the Atlanta Falcons in the first Super Bowl to go into overtime.
In his first exhibition, the street photographer Daniel Weiss documents the kind of eccentric moments people in the city complain about going extinct.
Our favorite looks shot between the men’s wear shows in New York.
Before there even was a New Orleans, Mobile, Ala., was celebrating Mardi Gras with festivities that begin in November and stretch for months.
Crowds in hundreds of cities around the world gathered Saturday in conjunction with the Women’s March on Washington.
There are thousands of getaways to explore this year. Here are some ideas to get you started.
Inside President Rodrigo Duterte’s brutal antidrug campaign in the Philippines, our photojournalist documented 57 homicide victims over 35 days.
A curated walk through the hallways of the newest Smithsonian museum before it opens next week. 13 years in the making, it attempts to depict the pain and pride of the black experience in America.
Members of the United States Olympic and Paralympic teams shed some clothing — whatever they thought was appropriate — to let you try to guess their sport.
Muhammad Ali, a three-time heavyweight boxing champion, was among the most controversial and charismatic sports figures of the 20th century.
Photographs of the pope’s first trip to the United States, as Catholics and non-Catholics alike will navigate crowds in three cities to catch a glimpse of the “people’s pope.”
Behind the scenes of Serena Williams’s historic Grand Slam bid — and ultimate collapse.
For 733 migrants crammed aboard two tiny boats somewhere between Libya and Italy, a leaky hull was neither the beginning nor the end of their troubles.
Pope Francis, the fourth pontiff to visit St. Patrick’s Cathedral, will find it brighter, cleaner and in better repair than it has been for decades.
The New Orleans of 2015 has been altered, and not just by nature. In some ways, it is booming as never before. In others, it is returning to pre-Katrina realities of poverty and violence, but with a new sense of dislocation for many, too.
A photographer parts the curtains on one of the world’s least-known places and brings back pictures of a country that is defined for many by mystery and war.
When Nepal was hit with a powerful earthquake the tremor shattered lives, landmarks and the very landscape of the country. The scope of the disaster in photographs.
The average American consumes more than 300 gallons of California water each week by eating food that was produced there.
Finding unexpected beauty in the hands of shoe shiners.
The Rosetta spacecraft is following Comet 67P/C-G as it makes its closest approach to the sun.
The men and women of one Ebola clinic in rural Liberia reflect on life inside the gates.
For nine days, waves of pro-democracy protests engulfed Hong Kong, swelling at times to tens of thousands of people and raising tensions with Beijing.
The Brown sisters have been photographed every year since 1975. The latest image in the series is published here for the first time.
Few collegians work as hard as the U.S. Military Academy’s 786 female cadets.
A journey through the state, featuring Jimmy Carter, Civil War re-enactors and newborn Cabbage Patch Kids.
A panoramic view of the progress at the new World Trade Center site exactly 13 years after the Sept. 11 attacks.
Scenes of sorrow and violence in a Missouri town after an unarmed black teenager was shot by a police officer.
The damage to Gaza’s infrastructure from the current conflict is already more severe than the destruction caused by either of the last two Gaza wars.
The Times asked firefighters to submit their first fire experiences on City Room. Read a selection of those stories.
The daily tally of rocket attacks, airstrikes and deaths in the conflict between Israel and Hamas.
The reporter Damien Cave and the photographer Todd Heisler traveled up Interstate 35, from Laredo, Tex., to Duluth, Minn., chronicling how the middle of America is being changed by immigration.
Despite a period of rising incomes, a tide of economic discontent helped make Narendra Modi the prime minister-elect.
A 32,000-ton arch that will end up costing $1.5 billion is being built in Chernobyl, Ukraine, to all but eliminate the risk of further contamination at the site of the 1986 nuclear reactor explosion.
Fairgoers share memories of family outings and moments of inspiration at the 1964 New York World’s Fair.
Runners, spectators and volunteers who were at the finish line of the Boston Marathon when the bombs exploded reflect on how their lives have been affected. Here are their stories of transformation.
Nelson Mandela’s death spurred an international outpouring of praise, remembrance and celebration.
What does the way you speak say about where you’re from? Answer the questions to see your personal dialect map.
Typhoon Haiyan, which cut a destructive path across the Philippines, is believed by some climatologists to be the strongest storm to ever make landfall.
Voters elected Bill de Blasio, but New York has always been a city of unofficial mayors.
Listen to New York Times editors, critics and reporters discuss the day’s news and features.