Free registration for the annual event at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture launched Thursday.
Solar panels will be installed on eleven buildings in Harlem and Washington Heights by local workers trained by advocacy groups.
The man's lawsuit claims he lost consciousness for a minute after being placed in a choke hold by a security guard.
The Nelson Mandela Community Garden is in a battle with the city to prevent the rise of an apartment building on its West 126th Street site.
The Harlem park will receive a $4.4 million upgrade to its Edgecombe Avenue stairs and paths as part of the Parks Without Borders program.
Tenants of a Riverside Drive building are being forced to put down a deposit for keys to the apartment complex.
Robert Bailey, a 67-year-old retired federal government worker, is the largest winner in New York State Lottery history.
A lucky Harlemite could be leaving $343.9 million on the table after winning the Powerball lottery in October.
A cooling tower at the Sugar HIll Project on St. Nicholas Avenue is responsible for both deadly uptown Legionnaires' outbreaks this year.
A customer was one of two winners of a $688 million jackpot.
The winner will share the prize with another person in Iowa.
The tech company is partnering with the Boys and Girls Club of Harlem to teach coding, 3-D printing and other STEM skills.
The scaffolding on West 123rd Street and Lenox Avenue was supposed to be temporary. Then a decade went by and it was still there.
Uptown residents will be able to sample original cocktails at participating bars for the rest of the month.
Some playground structures at the Grant Day Care Center on Amsterdam Avenue are being held together by tape.
Officials called on Amtrak to discuss compensation for "thousands of dollars of damage" suffered by a community garden on West 138th Street.
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The Lakeview Apartments' Mitchell-Lama status will be dissolved in a deal to keep the building affordable for the next four decades.
The historic district honors the cultural and political achievements of the area's African-American community in the 20th century.
The green thumbs of the Riverside Valley Community Garden are pointing fingers at Amtrak pesticides to explain a withering bounty.
The Harlem Harvest Festival will showcase local vendors on Saturday, Oct. 6.
Here's everything you need to know about the 2018 African American Day Parade in Harlem.
Love tomatoes? Make sure you get to Denny Farrell Riverbank State Park on Saturday, Sept. 15.
The public restroom is located under the Metro North viaduct on East 125th Street.
The data team at Localize.city studied which New York City addresses received the most dog bark complaints in a 12-month period.
Neighborhood residents wanted more trash pickups. Instead, they got fewer trash cans.
Some of the best and most useful content comes from the Patch community. Here's a roundup of stories from this week.
People laid flowers and photos of the Memphis-born singer near a plaque honoring the "Queen of Soul" in front of the theater.
Four transgender women and a gender nonconforming person claim staff at Texas Chicken & Burgers refused to serve them.
The nonprofit program helps young adults gain high school equivalency while teaching them construction and maintenance skills.
The writings include the full full 241-page manuscript of The Autobiography of Malcolm X and unpublished chapters.
Here's your guide to Harlem Week events in 2018.
Neighbors of the planned methadone clinic worry it will bring drug dealing to their historic district.
Yeni Gonzalez travelled more than 2,000 miles to see three children ICE agents took away from her in May.
A Buzzfeed News investigation found that 311 calls have skyrocketed on West 136th Street as the number of white residents increased.
The former employee of the Cayuga Centers facility in East Harlem said on CBS This Morning that kids are suffering "psychological trauma."
The woman was nearly killed in 2011 when she was struck by a shopping cart that fell four stories at the East River Plaza Mall.
The $150,000 project rehabilitated the park's pond and waterfall areas by plating more than 40 new trees and installing a new lawn.
A new study found Harlem was one of the New York City neighborhoods with the highest number of rodent complaints.
The Rutgers professor "resigned" from the White race in a now-deleted Facebook rant.