Civic Hall at Union Square, also known as Civic Hall, is a center for Civic Tech in Manhattan, New York City , that provides tech resources to New Yorkers of all ages and backgrounds. The Civic Hall space at the Zero Irving Building (124 East 14th Street) occupies 85,000 square feet across seven floors. Civic Hall was founded in 2014 by entrepreneurs Andrew Rasiej and Micah Sifry.
5-997: Civic Hall may refer to: Civic Hall at Union Square , opened 2023 in NYC Leeds Civic Hall in Leeds, opened 1933 Wolverhampton Civic Hall in Wolverhampton, opened 1938 Galleywood Civic Hall in Wolverhampton Civic Hall in Ballarat, Victoria , opened in 1956 Civic Hall in Port Lincoln, South Australia Portland Civic Hall in Portland, Victoria Rye Civic Hall in Rye, Victoria Ryde Civic Hall in Ryde, New South Wales "Civic Hall",
10-449: A focus on technology. Civic Hall tenants are both for- and non-profit organizations, including LaGuardia Community College . Civic Hall is a subsidiary of The Fedcap Group , a non-profit holding company consisting of 20 subsidiaries in the broad fields of healthcare , education , economic and workforce development . The original location of Civic Hall was a 18,500-square-foot office at 156 Fifth Avenue. Andrew Rasiej proposed
15-591: A song on the album Magnets by The Vapors See also [ edit ] Civic Center Civic Center Historic District (disambiguation) Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Civic Hall . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Civic_Hall&oldid=1229807337 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description
20-517: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Architectural disambiguation pages Civic Hall at Union Square Opened in November 2023, Civic Hall aims to provide resources to pursue opportunities in the city's technology industry. The Civic Hall space consists of state of the art classroom space, rented at below market rates to organizations and companies who provide workforce development with
25-461: The building project to the city in 2018. Rasiej led a unanimous Uniform Land Use Review Procedure (ULURP) approval process to up-zone the former location of a P.C. Richard & Son store on East 14th Street. The ULURP received unanimous approval in 2018 and the P.C. Richard & Son building was demolished. In 2023, the 21-story tech hub was completed. The Zero Irving project was developed by RAL Development with Davis Brody Bond designing
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