52nd Street from 7th to 6th Avenues is co-named "WC HANDYS Place"
The blocks of 52nd Street between Fifth Avenue and Seventh Avenue were renowned in the mid 20th century for the abundance of jazz clubs and lively street life. The street was convenient to musicians playing on Broadway and the "legitimate" nightclubs and was also the site of a CBS studio. Musicians who played for others in the early evening played for themselves on 52nd Street.
By the late 1950s the jazz scene began moving elsewhere around the city and urban renewal took hold of the street. By the 1960s, most of the legendary clubs were razed or fell into disrepair. The last club there closed its doors in 1968. Today, the street is full of banks, shops, and department stores and shows little trace of its jazz history. The block from 5th to 6th Avenues is formally co-named "Swing Street" and the one west of there "W. C. Handys Place".
The section between Eleventh and Tenth Avenues is signed "Joe Hovarth Way" in tribute to Joseph Hovarth (1945-1995) who located the Police Athletic League William J. Duncan Center on the block after moving from its original location.1. The Duncan Center is named for a patrolman who was shot while chasing a stolen car in the neighborhood on May 17, 1930.2
Radio City Station Post Office (Zip Code 10019) (south)
The Link (Manhattan), 43 story 144 m/ 471 ft apartment building opened in 20073 on site of former SIR recording studio used by the Rolling Stones (south)
75 Rockefeller Center, 33 129 m 424 ft building completed in 1947 the last of the original Rockefeller Center buildings that was originally used for the headquarters of the Rockefeller Esso Oil Company11 (north)
52nd between Lexington and Third Avenue is signed Israel Bonds Way (the Development Corporation for Israel which issues the bonds is headquartered at the intersection in the Grolier Building).