At the beginning of GTA IV, Niko Bellic arrives in Broker, and the island of Bohan is also available to him. The area of Charge Island, situated between Broker and Bohan is open as well.
After completion of the mission Blow Your Cover, where Niko has to drive Playboy X back to his apartment in North Holland, the island of Algonquin is unlocked. This also includes Happiness Island, which is situated off Algonquin. (Unlocking Algonquin will mean Chinatown and Little Italy are accessible.)
Sometime after completion of the Three Leaf Clover mission, Packie will ring Niko and ask him to help out his brother Derrick. This will unlock the final island of Alderney, as Derrick is situated there. All areas are then accessible.
Little Italy, Chinatown
Chinatown is bordered by the Lower East Side to the northeast, Little Italy to the northwest, and the Financial District to the south.
Chinatown is bordered by three neighborhoods: Little Italy to the west, the Lower East Side to the north, and City Hall and the courthouses to the south.
Immigrant overflow to one specific area
Yup. Manhattan's Chinatown has so expanded that it has swallowed up Little Italy.
No, Baltimore does not have a Chinatown. It does have a Little Italy. Baltimore has traditionally been identified more by its "villages" than by ethnic enclaves. A few of those "villages" are Highland Town, Federal Hill, Bolton Hill and Pig Town.
Chinatown can be found in any nation that has a large amount of Chinese immigrants that have settled in one part of town, and formed their own distinct community which is referred to as Chinatown. There are also Little Italy's for Italians immigrants, and Little Germany's for German immigrants. There can be communities in every nation that is made up of immigrants from one place on the Earth, and has a distinct unique features reflecting the immigrants that settled in that particular local. There is no Chinatown in China, because Most of the people who live in China are Chinese, and the entire nation is, except for those places that have an distinct immigrates communities, one big Chinatown.
just south of times square by little Italy
yes, it's called Chinatown and is about 14 square blocks on the lower east side just north of the financial district and east of little Italy
the Americans In all large cities, immigrants lived in neighborhoods filled with people of the same nationality. There were stores with familiar foods, restaurants serving favorites from back home, people who spoke your language, sometimes newspapers in your native language. It was like a little piece of home in America. The Americans would refer to these neighborhoods by the names of the ethnic people who lived there: Little Italy, Chinatown, Greektown, Corktown (Irish), etc.
Neither. Little Italy is a neighborhood. It is a tiny, tiny neighborhood, actually. It used to be bigger, but now it is just three streets: Mulberry Street, Mott Street, and Elizabeth Street, from Canal Street to East Houston Street. It is bordered by SoHo to the west, the Lower East Side to the north, and Chinatown to the south and east.
There is a "Little Italy" in the all major cities in the World. For example, in Toronto the Little Italy located in downtown at College street area