Southern Frontiers

| 03 Mar 2015 | 08:46

What we-and a few Manhattan notables-love below 14th Street For our inaugural issue, we wanted to celebrate Downtown Manhattan (an area we roughly define as everything-and we mean everything-below 14th Street). To us, this huge swath of the island is one of the most fascinating places in New York City, where local issues become national conversation. Downtown remains a well of diversity and encapsulates the cultural wealth that makes this borough a destination.

If we peel back the layers of time, this is where the story of New York City first begins. It is the birthplace of our urban metropolis and has become home to some of New York City's most iconic features, from Wall Street to the World Trade Center.

In the spirit of celebrating, we want to showcase what we love about this mecca of culture and history. We rounded up a few of our favorite residents and figures to parse out their favorite parks, restaurants, buildings and anything else they love. And our writers hit the streets to find the best of each neighborhood, from the obscure to the popular (like the Ghostbusters firehouse in Tribeca).

Our mélange of places, people and things isn't a guide or a "best of" list. We see this as a launching point for you, the reader, to discover the unexpected in Downtown Manhattan.

A SLICE OF THE WEST VILLAGE If you find yourself strolling down historic Bedford Street in the West Village on the lookout for No.75...READ MORE

FOLLOWING THE GARDEN PATH IN THE EAST VILLAGE In the 1970s, when an economic crisis saw the city-especially less affluent neighborhoods like the East Village-falling apart, something beautiful began popping up...READ MORE

IMPRESSIONS WITH PATRICK MCMULLAN The nightlife photographer whose name has become synonymous with fashion, art and celebrity culture in New York City reflects on the evolution of Lower Manhattan...READ MORE

EDITORS' PICKS Marissa Maier and Mark Peikert name their op five destinations in Downtown Manhattan...READ MORE

THE EXTRAVAGANCE OF THE SAN GENNARO FESTIVAL The word "grand" comes to mind when thinking of Little Italy's annual Fest of San Gennaro, and for good reason. READ MORE

THE GHOSTBUSTERS FIREHOUSE It is a nearly ubiquitous call and refrain. Cry out, "Who you gonna call?" and the crowd yells "Ghostbusters!" Built in 1904 on the corner of North Moore and Varick streets...READ MORE

FOLLOWING HISTORY ONE STEP AT A TIME As one of the oldest neighborhoods in New York City, the Lower East Side has more than a few checkered tales in its vault...READ MORE

WHERE BROADWAY'S COSTUMES ARE BORN There is no more genteel, quirkly, brimming-with-talent designer than William Ivey Long. (Yes, he uses his entire name; he is a Southerner to the bone.) In Long's eponymous studio at 44 Walker St., the staff all seem...READ MORE

RYDERS ALLEY MOTORCYCLE CLUB The first time I went down to the Ryders Alley motorcycle club was a Sunday afternoon in the late spring. The members, who pay $200 a month to house their $20,000 weekend toys, were grilling burgers...READ MORE

AN OPULENT TEMPLE AT THE FOOT OF MANHATTAN BRIDGE With shiny roasted ducks hanging in restaurant windows, bank signs boasting both English and Hanzi lettering and tai chi practitioners and mahjong players filling the parks, a jaunt through Chinatown feels like...READ MORE

BOXING OUT WALL STREET STRESSES The thick rubber mats covering the tile floor of Trinity's locker room slide and give a little under the weight of the athletes, mostly young men in their late twenties and early thirties...READ MORE

AN OUTDOOR INSTALLATION Sandwiched between Houston and Canal streets, this 73-acre area was one of my original New York City stomping grounds (and is the place I now call home)... READ MORE

THE URBAN FARM EXPERIENCE If it was ever a secret that the downtown area is leading the pack in turning the concrete jungle a little more green, the Parks Department's announcement back in April that they would devote an entire acre at Battery Park to an urban farm really let the cat out of the bag...READ MORE