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Booming Asian population fuels New Hyde Park growth

The phone was ringing off the hook recently at Halal Grill Eats while customers lined up, at the newly opened restaurant at 1441 Jericho Turnpike in New Hyde Park, near New Hyde Park Road.

Owned by Jimmy Ahmad, the restaurant is part of a new wave of restaurants and businesses in New Hyde Park. The Greater New Hyde Park Chamber of Commerce also helped with the grand opening February 6, with balloons marking the birth of this new restaurant in New Hyde Park.

Passersby stopped to look not just at the restaurant, but two Lamborghinis prominently parked in the parking lot, causing many drivers to slow down — and even stop — to see what the buzz was about.

While the demographics across much of Long Island have been changing, that’s certainly been the case in New Hyde Park, where this ribbon cutting is part of a much larger shift and welcome. Restaurants and businesses catering to, but not only to, an Asian-American population are finding business, while some others may be facing dropping demand.

Much of New Hyde Parks retail and dining are along Jericho Turnpike, including Halal Grill Eats, in the area that includes the New Hyde Park Shopping Mall and Hillside Avenue.

New Hyde Park, which now has a population of over 10,000, was once the site of the United Nations. It today is home to a large and growing Asian American population, fueling growth among businesses catering to them.

The racial composition of New Hyde Park includes about White, as well as more than a third Asian, just under 10% Hispanic and smaller percentages for Black or African American residents, according to the Census Reporter. Businesses, like Halal Grill Eats, are reflecting this changing demographic.

Of the roughly 30% born abroad, 65% were born in Asia, 12% in Europe, 23% in Latin America and 1% in Africa, according to Census Reporter. About 93% of New Hyde Park residents were living in the same house as a year ago, while 5% moved from another county and 1% from elsewhere in Nassau.

New Hyde Park also has a relatively affluent population,  with a median household income of $142,927, more than 92 % of residents with a high school degree or higher  and 3.6% below the poverty line, according to the Census Reporter.

The median age is about 43 with about 62% between ages 18 and 64, but about 29% age 60 or older, according to the Census Reporter.

New Hyde Park stands out for other reasons as well, including healthcare employment. Northwell Health, the state’s biggest employer, is based in New Hyde Park, where it has been growing, along with Lake Success, helping pump investment, energy and employment into the community.

Headquartered at 2035 Lakeville Rd, in New Hyde Park, Northwell also operates Long Island Jewish Medical Center in New Hyde Park.

It’s unusual in that it isn’t located in only one town: An incorporated village, New Hyde Park stretches from Hempstead to North Hempstead as a major home to commuters due to its proximity to New York City.

Abut 52% of those who work drive to work alone,  while 12% take public transportation, according to Census Reporter. But New Hyde Park is developing a big population who don’t travel to work: Around one in five, or 20% of New Hyde Park workers work at home.

New Hyde Park is also the site of various annual events such as its street fair every September along Jericho Turnpike, which could boost the Halal Grill Eats, although based on how busy they were during a recent call, they may not need the business.

There also is an annual Independence Day Parade which may have both a very American and international flavor as people from around the world celebrate their country.