| Location |
| Area bordered by 40th & 53rd St. and 6th &
9th. Av. |
| Metro |
| 42nd St.-Times Sq. |
| Info |
| Entertainment area famous for its many billboards |
| Remarks |
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Time Square is the center of New
York's New Year's Eve celebrations |
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At the end of the 19th century, New York City had expanded
up to 42nd street and the area was becoming the center of the city's social
scene. In 1904, the New York Times built the Times Tower on 43rd street
just off Broadway to replace the premises in Downtown. The square facing
the building was called
the Longacre square, but was soon renamed Times Square. The name is now
used for the area between 40th and 53rd street and 6th and 9th avenue.
The inauguration of the Times' new headquarters was celebrated with a
fireworks display, starting a New Year's eve tradition which still continues
today. The first famous ball-lowering from the 1 Times Square's rooftop
pole was held on New Year's Eve 1907.
At the start of the first World War, Times square was the center of the
Theater district and attracted a large number of visitors. This made the
square an ideal place for billboards. In 1917 the first large electric
display billboard was installed. 11 Years later, the first running electric
sign was let for the first time, to announce Herbert Hoover's victory
in the Presidential elections. The billboards have become such a tourist
attraction for the area, that
the zoning now requires the buildings to be covered with billboards!
In the thirties, the Great Depression led to a sharp decline in theater
attendance. Many businesses had to close down, and they were quickly replaced
by strip teases and and peep shows. The area continued to attract visitors
though and after the second World War, the Theater district was booming
again. At the end of the sixties, the area started to go downhill and
by the mid-seventies, tourists avoided Times square, which had become
a seedy, crime-ridden and drug-infested place.
In the 1980's redevelopment proposals were submitted, with little result.
This changed a decade later, when the Walt Disney Company opened a Disney
store on Times Square. This attracted more family-friendly businesses
to the area, leading to a so-called 'Disneyfication'. The area is - like
most of New York City - a lot safer now than in the early nineties and
is once again a magnet for tourists and a center of New York's social
scene.
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