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Sutton Place, Manhattan

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Townhouses line the east side of Sutton Place between 58th and 57th
Sutton Place South at 53d

Sutton Place is the name given to an affluent street and surrounding enclave of the borough of Manhattan in New York City. It is located on the cusp of the Midtown and Upper East Side neighborhoods, stretching between 57th Street and 59th Street, along the East River, south of the Queensboro Bridge, with the stretch below 57th Street down to 53rd Street called Sutton Place South. North of 59th Street, the road continues as York Avenue. Sutton Place is a small neighborhood where some of Manhattan's wealthiest people live.[citation needed]

Sutton Place was originally one of several disconnected stretches of Avenue A where space allowed east of First Avenue. Effingham B. Sutton constructed a group of brownstones in 1875 between 57th and 58th Streets, and is said to have lent the street his name, though the earliest source found by The New York Times dates back to 1883. The New York City Board of Aldermen approved a petition to change the name from "Avenue A" to "Sutton Place", covering the blocks between 57th and 60th Streets.[1][2]

Prominent residents of Sutton Place include architect I. M. Pei, former New York Governor Mario Cuomo and actress Sigourney Weaver. Former residents include Freddie Mercury, Bill Blass, C. Z. Guest, Bobby Short, Irene Hayes, Elsie de Wolfe, Marilyn Monroe and her then husband Arthur Miller.

The official residence of the United Nations Secretary-General is a five-story townhouse on the northeast corner of Sutton Place and East 57th Street. The townhouse was built for Anne Morgan, daughter of financier J. P. Morgan, in 1921, and donated as a gift to the United Nations in 1972.[3]

[edit] Controversy

Sutton Place encompasses two public parks, one at 57th Street and another at 53rd Street. The landscaped grounds behind One Sutton Place South, a neo-Georgian style apartment building designed by Rosario Candela, are currently the subject of a dispute between the building's owners and the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation. The city claims the building's lease for this land expired in 1990, and was never renewed. If the city prevails in this litigation, the land will be combined with the adjacent park at the foot of East 57th Street, more than doubling the size of the existing public space.[4]

[edit] Sutton Place in popular culture

[edit] References

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