St. Mark's Place | |
Maintained by | New York City Department of Transportation |
---|---|
Length | 1.3 mi (2.1 km)[1][2] |
Location | Manhattan, New York City |
ZIP Codes | 10003, 10009, 10011 |
West end | Sixth/Greenwich Avenues in West/Greenwich Villages |
East end | Avenue D in East Village |
North | 9th Street |
South | Waverly Place (6th Avenue to Broadway) 7th Street (Bowery to Avenue D) |
Construction | |
Commissioned | March 1811 |
8th Street is a street in the New York City borough of Manhattan that runs from Sixth Avenue to Third Avenue and also from Avenue B to Avenue D; its addresses switch from West to East as it crosses Fifth Avenue. Between Third Avenue and Avenue A it is named St. Mark's Place, after the nearby St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery on 10th Street at Second Avenue.
St. Mark's Place is considered a main cultural street for the East Village. Vehicular traffic runs east along both one-way streets. St. Mark's Place features a wide variety of retailers. Venerable institutions lining St. Mark's Place have included Gem Spa and the St. Mark's Hotel. There are several open-front markets that sell sunglasses, clothing, and jewelry. In her 400-year history of St. Mark's Place (St. Marks Is Dead), Ada Calhoun called the street "like superglue for fragmented identities" and wrote that "the street is not for people who have chosen their lives ... [it] is for the wanderer, the undecided, the lonely, and the promiscuous."[3]