CRP LLP
About
Accounting firms in Midtown tend to blend into the skyline—unless they’re perched on the 14th floor of a Broadway address. CRP LLP operates in that stratum of the city, where spreadsheets meet skyscrapers and tax codes hum alongside subway vibrations. This isn’t the kind of place that advertises with neon signs or sidewalk sandwich boards; its presence is more about the quiet rhythm of quarterly filings and audit trails. The building itself, 1460 Broadway, sits in a stretch where the garment district’s old-world hustle brushes up against the polished corporate facades of modern New York.
The firm’s work likely spans the usual suspects: tax preparation that doesn’t induce panic, audits that (hopefully) don’t unearth surprises, and bookkeeping precise enough to satisfy even the most skeptical CFO. Somewhere in those offices, ledgers balance, payroll gets processed, and financial statements take shape—all while the city below pulses with its own chaotic ledger of honking cabs and coffee spills. Accounting isn’t glamorous, but then again, neither is the view from a 14th-floor window when you’re squinting at a 1040 form at 3 p.m.
Numbers don’t lie, but they do require translation—something firms like this handle before the first metro-card swipe of the morning rush. Questions about deductions, corporate structuring, or why the IRS sends letters in envelopes designed to induce mild cardiac events? Those are the domain of places like CRP LLP. The phone number, should you need to confirm that yes, that expense was indeed non-deductible, is (518) 941-8548. No fanfare, no hold music anecdotes—just the direct line to someone who knows the difference between a write-off and a wishful thought.
Finding the office means navigating a building that’s seen decades of tenants come and go, though the accounting needs remain constant. For the exact floor and door—because even in an era of GPS, some things still require old-fashioned directions—the map will point the way. Midtown’s grid is predictable; tax law, less so.