City Living: Inwood
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A perfect place to appreciate Inwood’s beauty is the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Cloisters in Fort Tryon Park. Below, the Mamajuana Cafe, whose name is inspired by a Taino Indian miracle potion. Twenty photos of Inwood HERE. (Photos by Alana Abel)
By Magdalene Perez
Special to amNewYork
When schoolchildren in New York are taught that the Dutch purchased Manhattan Island from American Indians for just $24 and trinkets some 400 years ago, it’s unlikely the teacher also mentioned the transaction occurred in Inwood, the borough’s most remote neighborhood.
Perched at Manhattan’s north end, Inwood blends a unique mix of big-city feel with serene settings. Three beautiful parks, Fort Tryon, Isham and Inwood Hill, surround the Art Deco walk-ups in an oasis of green. Apartment buyers are often attracted to Inwood by the prospect of Hudson River views and good schools, at prices much lower than downtown.
Once the setting of some of the most heated battles of the American Revolution, Inwood transformed from rural to urban in the early 20th century. With the subways came development, and for many years Irish and Jewish families dominated the neighborhood.
That changed in the 1970s and ’80s, when an influx of immigrants from the Dominican Republic gave the neighborhood a distinctly Caribbean flavor.
A concentration of buyer-owned co-ops west of Broadway and rented apartments on the east side shape the neighborhood. But that is changing. With younger downtowners coming north in search of cheaper rents, Inwood is seeing a transformation, with more bars, restaurants and hangouts opening to suit the newcomers’ tastes.














