
Street sign at corner of Fifth Avenue and East 57th Street

Fifth Avenue, early morning photograph, looking south from Thirty-eighth Street
'Fifth Avenue' is a major
thoroughfare in the center of the
borough of
Manhattan in
New York City. Lined with expensive park-view real estate and historical mansions, it is a symbol of wealthy New York. Between Thirty-fourth and Fifty-ninth streets, it is also one of the premier shopping streets in the world, on par with
Oxford Street in
London and the
Champs-Élysées in
Paris. It is one of the most expensive streets in the world, on a par with Paris, London, and
Tokyo lease prices: the "most expensive street in the world" moniker changes depending on currency fluctuations and local economic conditions from year to year.
[1]
Fifth Avenue originates at
Washington Square Park in
Greenwich Village and runs northwards through the heart of
Midtown, along the eastern side of
Central Park, through the
Upper East Side and
Harlem, where it terminates at the
Harlem River at 142nd Street.
Fifth Avenue carries
one-way traffic downtown (southbound) from 135th Street to Washington Square Park. Where Fifth Avenue had two-way traffic over most of its course until the early 1960s, it now allows two-way traffic north of 135th Street only. From 124th Street to 120th Street, Fifth Avenue is cut off by
Marcus Garvey Park, with southbound traffic diverted around the park via Mount Morris Park West.
Fifth Avenue is the dividing line for streets in Manhattan. It, for instance, separates East Fifty-ninth Street from West Fifty-ninth Street. As the zero-numbering point for its ''street'' addresses, numbers increase in both directions as one moves away from Fifth Avenue, with 1 East Fifty-ninth Street on the corner at Fifth Avenue, and 300 East Fifty-ninth Street located three blocks to the east of it.
History

Fifth Avenue, 1878: illustration from ''The Wickedest Woman in New York: Madame Restell, the Abortionist'' by Clifford Browder
The high status of Fifth Avenue was confirmed in 1862, when
Caroline Schermerhorn Astor settled on the southwest corner of Thirty-fourth Street, and the beginning of the end of its reign as a residential street was symbolized by the erection, in 1893, of the Astoria Hotel on the site of her house, later linked to its neighbor as the
Waldorf-Astoria Hotel (now the site of the
Empire State Building). Fifth Avenue is the central scene in
Edith Wharton's 1920 Pulitzer Prize winning novel ''
The Age of Innocence''. The novel describes New York's social elite in the 1870s and provides historical context to Fifth Avenue and New York's aristocratic families.
Originally a narrower thoroughfare, much of Fifth Avenue south of
Central Park was widened in 1908, sacrificing its wide sidewalks to accommodate the increasing traffic. The midtown blocks, now famously commercial, were largely a residential district until the turn of the twentieth century. The first commercial building on Fifth Avenue was erected by
Benjamin Altman who bought the corner lot on the northeast corner of Thirty-fourth Street in 1896, and demolished the "Marble Palace" of his arch-rival,
A. T. Stewart. In 1906 his department store,
B. Altman and Company, occupied the whole of its block front. The result was the creation of a high-end shopping district that attracted society ladies and the upscale stores that wished to serve them.
Lord & Taylor's flagship store is still located on Fifth Avenue near the
Empire State Building and the
New York Public Library.
In the early part of the 1900s, the very rich of New York migrated to the stretch of Fifth Avenue between
Fifty-ninth Street and
Ninety-sixth Street, the stretch where Fifth Avenue faces Central Park. This area contains many highly notable apartment buildings, many of them built in the 1920s by architects such as
Rosario Candela and J. E. R. Carpenter. A very few post-
World War II structures break the unified limestone frontage, notably the
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum between Eighty-eighth and Eighty-ninth Streets.
Notable sights
Many landmarks and famous buildings are situated along Fifth Avenue in Midtown and the Upper East Side. In Midtown are the
Empire State Building,
[1] the
New York Public Library,
Rockefeller Center, and
Saint Patrick's Cathedral. The stretch of Fifth Avenue from the 80s through the 90s (i.e., from 82nd Street to 105th Street) has so many museums that it has acquired the nickname ''
Museum Mile'' and includes such institutions as the
Metropolitan Museum of Art and the
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum. That area was known in the early twentieth century as ''
Millionaire's Row'' after the many
mansions built there, as the richest New Yorkers moved their
residences north to face Central Park. Earlier, several opulent
Vanderbilt houses and other mansions were built in the 50s and in even earlier times farther south. The
New York Academy of Medicine is located at 103rd Street, and
Mount Sinai Hospital is located at 98th Street.
Here are Tiffany, Cartier, and Bergdoff Goodman. Between
Thirty-fourth Street and Sixtieth Street, Fifth Avenue is a popular retail center, with various luxury stores facing that street, most notably
F. A. O. Schwarz on Fifty-eighth Street. Other famous Fifth Avenue retailers, no longer in existence, were
B. Altman and Company,
Bonwit Teller, and
Peck & Peck.
Located on 720 Fifth Avenue is the
Abercrombie & Fitch flagship store. Between East Fifty-eighth and East
Fifty-ninth Street is
Apple's 32-foot glass cube, which serves as an entrance for its completely-underground flagship
retail store.
Parade route
Fifth Avenue is the traditional route for many celebratory
parades in New York City; thus, it is closed to traffic on numerous Sundays in warm weather. These are distinct from the ''
ticker-tape parades'' held on the ''"
Canyon of Heroes"'' on lower
Broadway, and the
Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade held on Broadway from the Upper West Side downtown to Herald Square.
Bicycling route
Bicycling on Fifth Avenue ranges from safe with a bike lane south of Twenty-third Street
[2] to scenic along
Central Park, to dangerous through Midtown with very heavy traffic during rush hours.
See also
★
Transportation in New York City
★
List of upscale shopping districts
★
Madison Avenue
★
Park Avenue
References
1. which supplanted the original Waldorf-Astoria Hotel.
2. New York City Cycling Map
External links
Further reading
★
The Sky's the Limit: Passion and Property in Manhattan, , Steven, Gaines, Little, Brown, 2005, ISBN 0-316-60851-3