When Min Lin replaced her 1930s rowhouse in Flushing with a two-floor building, she unwittingly thrust herself into a battle between preservation and development.
KIRK SEMPLE and JEFFREY E. SINGER, NY Times:
Tue, 06/02/2015 - 7:32am
When Min Lin replaced her 1930s rowhouse in Flushing with a two-floor building, she unwittingly thrust herself into a battle between preservation and development.