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New York - If Mr. Russianoff were at the bargaining table, he would ask that countdown clocks on subway platforms be installed at a faster pace; they’ve made it thus far to less than 40 percent of the system’s 468 stations. Elsewhere on the technology front, he’d like swifter adoption of Bus Time, a service that enables riders to use their cellphones to find out how much longer it may be before their bus arrives. New York Times - A Voice for the Riders, Lost Amid Transit Talks. What’s on the mind of Metropolitan Transportation Authority commuters?

(Source: The New York Times)

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open data also means pizza

nycedc:


New York Pizza
As New Yorkers, we love to talk pizza. Nearly everyone has a favorite place, and many people claim to know the best slice. To our knowledge, only Colin Hagendorf would know objectively where the best in Manhattan is – because he has now been to every pizza place in the borough.
Whether you prefer coal oven, Sicilian, or a 99 cent slice from 2 Bros, sometimes what matters most is just which place is the closest. So which New York City neighborhoods have the highest number of pizza establishments? Using the latest available data from the Department of Health restaurant inspection results, we know this to be the East Village (zip 10003) with 33 pizza places. In Queens, Ridgewood (11385) has the most, while Williamsburg (11211) is number one in Brooklyn. Williamsbridge (10467) and Oakwood/New Dorp (10306) are top in the Bronx and Staten Island, respectively.
Source: NYCEDC analysis of NYC DOHMH data
Land area and residential population play a big role in the number of pizza places in a particular zip code. On a per capita basis, East Harlem (10029) and the Lower East Side (10002) rise to the top spots, while the East Village falls to number 18.
Hungry now? Favorites of the Economic Analysis & Research team include Sam’s (Cobble Hill), Sac’s (Astoria—pizzas pictured above), the vodka slice at Pomodoro (Nolita), and Franny’s (Prospect Heights).
StatsBee is a column featuring interesting statistics about NYC, written by economists at the Economic Research & Analysis department within NYCEDC’s Center for Economic Transformation. (Photo by Adam Kuban)
open data also means pizza

nycedc:

New York Pizza

As New Yorkers, we love to talk pizza. Nearly everyone has a favorite place, and many people claim to know the best slice. To our knowledge, only Colin Hagendorf would know objectively where the best in Manhattan is – because he has now been to every pizza place in the borough.

Whether you prefer coal oven, Sicilian, or a 99 cent slice from 2 Bros, sometimes what matters most is just which place is the closest. So which New York City neighborhoods have the highest number of pizza establishments? Using the latest available data from the Department of Health restaurant inspection results, we know this to be the East Village (zip 10003) with 33 pizza places. In Queens, Ridgewood (11385) has the most, while Williamsburg (11211) is number one in Brooklyn. Williamsbridge (10467) and Oakwood/New Dorp (10306) are top in the Bronx and Staten Island, respectively.


Source: NYCEDC analysis of NYC DOHMH data

Land area and residential population play a big role in the number of pizza places in a particular zip code. On a per capita basis, East Harlem (10029) and the Lower East Side (10002) rise to the top spots, while the East Village falls to number 18.

Hungry now? Favorites of the Economic Analysis & Research team include Sam’s (Cobble Hill), Sac’s (Astoria—pizzas pictured above), the vodka slice at Pomodoro (Nolita), and Franny’s (Prospect Heights).

StatsBee is a column featuring interesting statistics about NYC, written by economists at the Economic Research & Analysis department within NYCEDC’s Center for Economic Transformation. (Photo by Adam Kuban)

(via nycopendata)