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Amy Zimmer

Real Estate and Education Reporter @the_zim Contact

Amy Zimmer is a reporter who oversees real estate and education coverage for DNAinfo.com New York. Previously, she covered the Upper East Side and Murray Hill/Gramercy neighborhoods for the site. 

Amy joins DNAinfo after six years reporting on everything from economic development and the environment to culture and crime for Metro. She broke news on the demise of CBGB, Coney Island redevelopment, and on the alarming trend of young women fainting on subways for lack of a good breakfast.

Amy is a born and bred New Yorker with deep roots on the Lower East Side. Her essay about her family’s former store on Orchard Street, H. Eckstein’s & Sons, appeared in The Suburbanization of New York: Is the World’s Greatest City Becoming Just Another Town (Princeton Architectural, 2007). Amy herself was featured in a 2004 New York Times story about the ever-evolving neighborhood, entitled “Trendiness Among the Tenements,” in which she represented “trendiness.”

Her work has also appeared in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, City Limits and on Public Radio International’s “Pacific Time.” A piece she wrote for the Brooklyn Rail won a 2004 Independent Press Association award and was anthologized in Pieces of a Decade: Brooklyn Rail Nonfiction 2000 – 2010 (Black Square Editions/Brooklyn Rail, 2010).

Amy received her Bachelor’s degree in anthropology from Yale University, where she won the Sapir Prize for her senior essay on New York graffiti writers. She has a Master’s degree in journalism from New York University.

Fun Fact:Remember Miss Subways? Amy has been working with artist Fiona Gardner on tracking down former winners of the beauty contest that ran from 1941 – 1976. Her oral histories and Gardner’s photographs will be featured in an exhibition at the New York Transit Museum in 2012.


 
Bedford-Stuyvesant »

March 10, 2015

Terms like "Farmers Market," "French Doors," and "Foyer" help drive up interest, StreetEasy found.

Astoria & Long Island City »

March 10, 2015

Schools are crowded in all five boroughs. New seats are on the way, but not enough to solve the problem.

Downtown »

March 5, 2015

Just 5 percent of offers to elite high schools went to black students and 7 percent to Latinos.

Chelsea & Hell's Kitchen »

March 4, 2015

For those set on making art in New York City, here's the lowdown from gallerists and artists.  

Fort Greene and DUMBO »

March 3, 2015

It's not enough to have gyms and playrooms, luxury buildings are also adding a full schedule of classes.

Murray Hill, Gramercy & Midtown East »

March 2, 2015

The city lifted a longstanding ban Monday, allowing students to bring cellphones to school.

Astoria & Long Island City »

March 2, 2015

Chicken, the top item on school cafeteria menus, will be antibiotic-free starting next year, DOE said.

Harlem »

February 27, 2015

Rental listings site Apartable mines city data on violations and complaints for NYC's 900,000 buildings.