New York is now home to a first-of-its-kind space designed for the people who keep takeout and groceries moving at lightning speed through its streets.
New York City and state leaders announced the opening of a new Deliverista Hub near City Hall Park- housed in a former newsstand, a dedicated rest stop and service center built specifically for app-based delivery workers.
The hub is the first of its kind in the United States and is aimed at supporting an estimated 80,000 delivery workers across the city’s five boroughs.
The space functions as a hybrid pit stop and support center where workers can:
take a break,repair their bikes,safely charge e-bike batteries,and access resources on topics like street safety, wage theft, and app-related issues.The charging stations are available around the clock and can also be used by the public.
The project was developed through a partnership between New York City officials, including Mayor Zohran Mamdani and U.S. Senator Chuck Schumer, alongside worker-led advocacy groups like the Worker’s Justice Project. Organizers say the hub was shaped directly by delivery workers themselves, many of whom have long faced harsh working conditions with limited access to safe rest areas or charging infrastructure.
The hub is meant to help address safety concerns in one of the city’s most dangerous jobs- with officials noting that delivery workers experience high injury rates and often spend long hours navigating traffic and unpredictable weather without basic workplace protections.
Beyond immediate services, city leaders see the Deliverista Hub as “a blueprint for the future.” With e-bike use rapidly growing and delivery services becoming a permanent fixture of urban life, the goal is to expand similar infrastructure across the city.
The initiative is also tied to broader efforts to improve worker protections and support a shift toward safer, more sustainable transportation.
“Delivery workers keep this city running — through the cold, the rain and every storm that comes our way,” said Mayor Zohran Mamdani. “They make it possible for families across all five boroughs to sit down to a warm meal or get the groceries they need right on time. After long hours on the street, workers deserve a place to rest, access resources, charge their e-bike batteries safely and be in community. This space provides all that and more. In opening the Deliverista Hub, we’re building a dedicated place for the City to take care of its own.”
The hub was designed by FANTÁSTICA, an urban design and street furniture company focused on sustainability.
For now, it stands as a small, but significant sign that the people powering the gig economy are finally getting a space built with them in mind.
LaGuardia Runway Crash March 23, 2026
A tragic accident occurred at LaGuardia Airport late Sunday night, resulting in the deaths of two pilots after a Jazz Aviation flight, operating for Air Canada, collided with a fire truck on the runway. The incident happened around 11:45 p.m. as the aircraft, which had just landed from Montreal, struck the emergency vehicle responding to a separate incident. The collision left the plane severely damaged, with its nose crushed and debris hanging from the cockpit, while the fire truck was overturned and heavily damaged. Of the 72 passengers and four crew members on board, 41 were hospitalized, with some suffering serious injuries. Two Port Authority workers inside the fire truck also sustained injuries. Audio from air traffic control revealed the urgent moments leading up to the crash, indicating a tense situation as controllers warned the fire truck to stop. Following the incident, LaGuardia Airport was temporarily closed, and federal investigators from the National Transportation Safety Board are now conducting an investigation. The airport is expected to remain closed until at least 2 p.m. the next day.
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