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Kew Gardens Hills, Queens, 11367



Kew Gardens Hills, also sometimes incorrectly referred to as Kew Garden Hills, is a one-square mile neighborhood in the New York City borough of Queens. It is bordered to the West by Flushing Meadows-Corona Park, to the North by the Long Island Expressway, to the South by Union Turnpike and to the East by Parsons Boulevard (or by 164th Street depending on one's definition of the boundaries). Kew Gardens Hills roughly encompasses ZIP code 11367. The neighborhood is part of Queens Community Board 8.


Main arteries through the neighborhood are Main Street, Jewel Avenue, and Kissena Boulevard. Main arteries around the perimeter of the neighborhood are Union Turnpike, Horace Harding Expressway, Kissena Boulevard and Parsons Boulevard. Highways to the neighborhood include the Long Island Expressway, Grand Central Parkway, Van Wyck Expressway, and the Jackie Robinson Parkway (Interborough).


Kew Gardens Hills is made easily accessible thanks to the expressways surrounding it and the quick commute on the Q46 bus to the Union Turnpike-Kew Gardens subway station.


Adjacent neighborhoods include Forest Hills to the west, Hillcrest to the east, Briarwood to the south, and Queensboro Hill to the north.


Kew Gardens Hills is a relatively young Queens community, when compared to other neighborhoods in the borough, with its earliest homes built in 1917 off of Union Turnpike.


In the 1800s, the area was farmland and in the early 1900s, the neighborhood was known as Queens Valley and consisted of golf courses. One road that ran through present-day Kew Gardens Hills was 73rd Avenue, which was called Blackstump Road since colonial days. Presently, it has a bike lane. Kissena Boulevard, which runs from downtown Flushing, ends its run in Kew Gardens Hills at Parson Boulevard. In the 1800s and early 1900s, both thoroughfares were known as Jamaica Road. It was the most direct route from the towns of Flushing and Jamaica at that time.




Growth to Kew Gardens Hills came when Kew Gardens, Queens, to the south, gained a subway line at Queens Boulevard in 1936 and Flushing Meadows Corona Park, directly to the northwest of the neighborhood, hosted the 1939 New York World's Fair. Early residents were mostly German, Irish and Italian. Many were relocating from Brooklyn and Manhattan. The area was hilly and Kew Gardens was known as a prestigious Queens neighborhood and so developers changed its name from Queens Valley to Kew Gardens Hills. The first Queen of Peace mass took place in 1939. Main Street Cinemas opened in 1940. Main Street was paved and bus routes began to serve the area in 1941. The Jewish Center of Kew Gardens Hills was established in 1942 to become a gathering place for the growing Jewish community in the area. The Queens County Savings Bank opened its branch in 1949 and local school, P.S. 164, also opened its doors that year.


Parkway Village, near Union Turnpike, was built to house United Nations employees in the 1940s. Some owners are seeking landmark historic status for the co-op.


By the 1950s, the Orthodox Jewish community began to take root and formed the Young Israel Congregation of Kew Gardens Hills with 15 families. That congregation now consists of 2,000 families. At Vleigh Place and Main Street, the City of New York created Freedom Square in 1958. In March 1960, the city council renamed it Freedom Square to commemorate the one hundredth anniversary of the birth of Theodor Herzl, founder of present-day Zionism.




It is a mixed neighborhood of single-family homes (detached or in rows) as well as three to six-story garden apartment buildings mostly built during the years immediately following World War II) in the 1940s, such as Regency Gardens. These are characterized by their lawns and internal pathways that give the complexes a small-neighborhood feel. There are several homes in Kew Gardens Hills that predate Main Street, whose property was subject to eminent domain in the 1930s to widen 144th Street into the Main Street extension from northern Flushing. A few public housing projects in one part of the neighborhood were also built. Other buildings in that area were built to house employees of certain unions, like the Eletchester Co-operative Building built to house electrical employees in 1949 on what used to be the grounds of the Pomonok Country Club. That building no longer houses electrical employees exclusively.


The Opal, a mid-rise luxury building with concierge, was built in Kew Gardens Hills a few years ago.


The neighborhood contains an established and continually growing Orthodox and Haredi Jewish population and some Israelis, as well as smaller groups of Latinos,Koreans, Chinese, Indians, Afghanis and African Americans.




The commercial areas of the neighborhood include Main Street, Union Turnpike, Parsons Boulevard and Kissena Boulevard. Fran Drescher once worked at the Main Street Cinemas in Kew Gardens Hills in the 1970s. Main Street, in particular, is home to many Jewish-owned stores and Kosher restaurants. Most of the businesses along Main Street in Kew Gardens Hills close for Shabbat Friday Evenings and Saturdays until sundown. Many businesses along Kissena Blvd. on the other hand have closed.


Scenes from the 2000 movie Boiler Room were shot in Kew Gardens Hills.


Kew Gardens Hills is home to Max and Mina's Ice Cream, named number 1 of the top 10 unique Ice Cream Parlors in America in Everybody Loves Ice Cream, the Whole Scoop on America's favorite treat by Shannos Jackson Arnold, Emmis Books, July 2004. Some Manhattan restaurants offer Max & Mina's Ice Cream on their dessert menus.




Kew Gardens Hills is also home to the Queens County Savings Bank building, which is modeled after Philadelphia's Independence Hall. The building also houses a full-size replica of the Liberty Bell.


There are two cemeteries in Kew Gardens Hills, Mount Hebron Cemetery and Cedar Grove, whose main entrances are located on the Horace Harding Expressway.


There are several dozen houses of worship in Kew Gardens Hills, many of them Jewish. The Roman Catholic Church Queen of Peace is located on Main Street at 77th Road.




This neighborhood has a large Orthodox Jewish population, including immigrants from Israel, Russia, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, France, Africa, and the Middle East. Many residents have also moved from neighborhoods such as Crown Heights in Brooklyn. The Jewish population in Kew Gardens Hills have contributed to naming of four streets in the neighborhood.




These include Haym Salomon Square (geometrically a triangle), across from the Kew Gardens Hills branch of the Queens Borough Public Library, named for the Revolutionary; Rabbi Kirshblum Triangle named for the first Rabbi of the Kew Gardens Hills Jewish Center; Freedom Square named in honor of Theodor Herzl's quest for a Jewish homeland; and Rabbi Avraham Schechter Way named for a prominent resident of the community is located between 147 Street and 150 Street along 72nd Drive.


A sizable Muslim and Sikh population exists in areas of Kew Gardens Hills as well, most notably on the northern side with several stores catering to that population.


Two university campuses are located in Kew Gardens Hills. Located in the northern portion of Kew Gardens Hills is Queens College, a liberal arts college that is part of the City University of New York (CUNY) system. The CUNY Law School is also in Kew Gardens Hills, on Main Street. Queens College also serves as an important cultural institution for neighborhood residents with Colden Center for the Performing Arts and the Godwin-Ternbach Museum.




Notable graduates of Queens College include native son Jerry Seinfeld, who was awarded an honorary doctorate in 1994, and Paul Simon.


Lander College, the men's college of Touro College, has a large campus on 150th Street at 75th Road.


Public schools located in Kew Gardens Hills include P.S. 164, P.S. 165, Robert F. Kennedy Community High School, John Bowne High School and Townsend Harris High School at Queens College. Townsend Harris High School serves academically gifted students. North Queens Community High School, which serves troubled New York City youths who wish to obtain their high school diploma has been in the area since 2007.


Yeshiva Chofetz Chaim (76th Road & 147th Street) and Yeshiva Ohr Hachaim (71st Avenue & Main Street, a division of Touro College) are large yeshivas located in Kew Gardens Hills.




Other religious schools located in Kew Gardens Hills include St. Nicholas of Tolentine, Shevach High School (Main Street at 75th Road), Mesivta Yesodei Yeshurun, Yeshiva of Central Queens (70th Road at 150th Street), Yeshiva Ketana (Parsons Boulevard & 78th Road) and Solomon Schechter School of Queens (76-26 Parsons Blvd.)


Queens Library operates the Kew Gardens Hills Branch at 72-33 Vleigh Place.


Notable residents of Kew Gardens Hills include:


Arverne  Astoria  Astoria Heights  Auburndale  Bayside  Bayswater  Bay Terrace  Beechhurst  Bellaire  Belle Harbor  Bellerose  Blissville  Boulevard Gardens  Breezy Point  Briarwood  Broad Channel  Broadway-Flushing  Cambria Heights  College Point  Corona  Ditmars  Douglaston  Dutch Kills  East Elmhurst  Edgemere  Electchester  Elmhurst  Far Rockaway  Floral Park  Flushing  Forest Hills  Forest Hills Gardens  Fresh Meadows  Fresh Pond  Glendale  Glen Oaks  Hamilton Beach  Hammels  Hillcrest  Hollis  Hollis Hills  Holliswood  Howard Beach  Howard Park  Hunters Point  Jackson Heights  Jamaica  Jamaica Estates  Jamaica Hills  Kew Gardens  Kew Gardens Hills  Laurelton  LeFrak City  Linden Hill  Lindenwood  Little Neck  Locust Manor  Long Island City  Malba  Maspeth  Meadowmere  Middle Village  Murray Hill  Neponsit  North Corona  North Shore Towers  Oakland Gardens  Old Howard Beach  Ozone Park  Pomonok  Queensboro Hill  Queensbridge  Queens Village  Ramblersville  Ravenswood  Rego Park  Richmond Hill  Ridgewood  Rochdale  Rockaway  Rockaway Beach  Rockaway Park  Rockwood Park  Rosedale  Roxbury  St. Albans  Seaside  South Jamaica  South Ozone Park  Springfield Gardens  Sunnyside  Sunnyside Gardens  Tudor Village  Utopia  Whitestone  Willets Point  Woodhaven  Woodside


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