Since 2005, a new and very poignant form of emblematic expression has become popular in NYC: “ghost bikes.” More than 65 funereal, white-painted bikes have appeared throughout the city in memory to children killed in traffic-related biking accidents, according to the Street Memorial Project. While each of the bikes is documented by the SMP, in [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Cycling, ghost, Ghost bike, new york city, nyc, shopping, Sport, West End Avenue
New York City HD Part 1 from Andre Merilo on Vimeo. A new look at NYC via superb HD time-lapse photography. The imagery is magnificent. (Part 2 could be found here.) Camera and Editor Andre Merilo Music by: Faithless – Killer’s Lullaby Carbon Based Lifeforms – World of Sleepers Sunlounger – Sunny Tales York – [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Arts and Entertainment, Metro Areas, new york, new york city, New York City Metro, nyc, photography, United States
A radiant Memorial Day weekend, ending the month of May, cast its radiance along a row of buildings on 19th Street in Manhattan. The Manhattanhenge Effect is still in the air to enhance the brilliance; the sun doing a special bit of fiery painting on NYC‘s steel, stone and glass canvass. Photo: 19th St Shining [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Flickr, Holidays, List of streets in Manhattan, Manhattanhenge, memorial-day, new york city, nyc, Steel
We’re accustomed to moving on through thick and thin, and whatever else gets in our way, through the high and low roads of New York City. The various trials and tribulations of big city life, the obstacles and unpleasantness that either impede or litter our path, are to be quickly avoided and even more quickly [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Homelessness, Jamaica, Metro Areas, new york, new york city, nyc, Poverty, United States
We’ve experienced (and still are experiencing) a turbulent weekend here in NYC. A nor’easter, of exceptional sound and fury signifying everything, ravished the NYC area with winds gusting at over 60 mph, toppling trees and power lines. Power was knocked out for 126,000 residents in the five boroughs while commuters were left stranded due to [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Boston, Coast Guard, Intrepid Sea-Air-Space Museum, John F. Kennedy International Airport, Neil Armstrong, new york, nyc, staten island ferry
A retrospective on the New York City of the 1970s/ 1980s, when the town cast a “gloriously gritty” ambiance, is always good for a bittersweet sort of nostalgia. But we were younger then and hungover from the Sixties; it all seemed like an all-encompassing Theatre of the Absurd. Take a look at the Gothamist’s photo [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comments (2) Article tags: 1970s, 1980s, Arts, Comedy, Dramas, DVD, Gothamist, Metro Areas, new york, new york city, New York City Metro, nyc, Programs, Rolling Stones, Television, United States
Never let it be said that life is ever boring down in the the NYC subway system. Within those cavernous depths of granite, grinding rail and rapid crowds, our “fun city” becomes really fun (or funnier) with an array of impromptu entertainment for your en route distraction. In addition to the subway’s standard fare of [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Commuting, new york city, New York City Subway, nyc, Rail, Rail transport, Rapid transit, Transport
The fact that parking spaces on Manhattan streets are as rare as empty seats on subway trains during rush hours has been long established. Motorists have been known to search high and low–oftentimes begged, borrowed and killed–for a chance to park within a reasonable distance from their destination. Even within the luxurious dream-within-a-dream realm of [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Central Park West, Metro Areas, new york, new york city, new york times, nyc, United States, Upper West Side
Updated, 1:02 p.m. | More than 100 trees were toppled and hundreds more were damaged in Central Park during the fierce thunderstorm that moved over New York City on Tuesday night. It was the most severe destruction that the park’s trees had sustained in at least 30 years, according to officials at the city’s Department [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comments (6) Article tags: central park, City Room, Hurricane Gloria, new york, new york city, nyc, park, United States, Vice president
Staten Island may not lay claim to many distinctions but can finally boast of one: Island Tattoo, New York City‘s first tattoo museum. This is certainly a radical move for that ignored borough (suspected as being a covert part of New Jersey), often dismissed as lacking in the finer graces of NYC’s bohemian dwellings, commuter [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: art, brooklyn, Grasmere, New Jersey, new york city, nyc, staten island, Tattoo
The first (and hopefully last) snowstorm of the season is now in progress. An earlier mix of snow and sleet is now a heavy falling of rapidly accumulating pure snow. The sidewalks and cars (including my own) outside my apartment window are deeply buried in the wintry whiteness. We start with those light snow showers [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Inch, new york city, NewYork, nyc, Sidewalk, Snow, United States, Winter storm
Rooftop water tanks have dotted the NYC skyline since the late nineteenth century. They’ve changed little in that time, reaching their height of technological integrity around the 1920s, and stand like stately if quaint remnants of the city’s abiding past. Nonetheless, water tanks, mostly wooden, were and are a crucial source of New York‘s water [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: 19th century, buildings, construction, Fountain, new york city, NewYork, nyc, Plumbing, Water tank, YouTube