Formerly,
the
neighborhood
included
all
of
Elizabeth,
Mott
and
Mulberry
Streets
north
of
Canal
Street,
together
with
the
surrounding
area.
As
Italian-Americans
left
Manhattan
for
other
boroughs
and
the
suburbs
in
the
middle
of
the
Twentieth
Century,
the
neighborhood
recognizable
as
Little
Italy
gradually
shrank.
Large
portions
of
the
neighborhood
were
absorbed
by
Chinatown,
as
immigrants
from
China
and
other
East
Asian
countries
moved
to
the
area.
The
northern
reaches
of
Little
Italy,
near
Houston
Street,
also
ceased
to
be
recognizably
Italian,
and
eventually
became
the
neighborhood
known
today
as
NoLIta,
an
abbreviation
for
North
of
Little
Italy.
Today,
the
section
of
Mulberry
Street
between
Broome
and
Canal
Streets,
lined
with
Italian
restaurants
popular
with
tourists,
remains
distinctly
recognizable
as
Little
Italy.
The Feast of San Gennaro is a large street fair, lasting 11 days,
that takes place every September along Mulberry Street between Houston
Street and Canal Street.