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Study Shows 40 Percent of Manhattan Buildings Don't Display Addresses

By DNAinfo Staff on March 15, 2010 5:32pm  | Updated on March 16, 2010 7:37am

By Jon Schuppe

DNAinfo Reporter/Producer

MANHATTAN — Of the countless annoyances of everyday life in New York City, the lack of proper numbering on city buildings probably doesn’t rank as high as, say, noise or cheating cabbies.

But it is irritating.

And now Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer has a study to show how widespread the problem is.

He sent researchers to 13 streets in Manhattan, and found that about 40 percent of buildings did not display their addresses.

The worst was Eighth Avenue between 42nd and 59th streets in Midtown West, where 58.2 percent of buildings didn’t show their street numbers. Also among the worst offenders were buildings on Columbus Avenue between 67th and 83rd streets on the Upper West Side (with a 53.8 percent failure rate), and 42nd Street between Sixth and First avenues in Midtown (54.7 percent).

On a stretch of Columbus Avenue on the Upper West Side, more than half of buildings don't display their street numbers.
On a stretch of Columbus Avenue on the Upper West Side, more than half of buildings don't display their street numbers.
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Jon Schuppe/DNAinfo