NYC opened its first car charging station for electric vehicles yesterday. Located at a parking facility on Ninth Avenue between 35th and 36th Streets (aptly named “Edison” Properties), cars needing to be electrified can go there. Since there are only 10 electric vehicles in the city at the present time, the lines at the station [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Electric car, Electric vehicle, energy, Michael Bloomberg, new york city, Ninth Avenue, Technology, Transportation
While half of New York City is currently engaged in modernization the other half is engaged in a relatively new endeavor: historical restoration. While the old is being rapidly replaced by the (arguably) new and improved, the old is also gaining a new lease on life due to its historic or nostalgic significance. Enormous sums [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: bridge, brooklyn-bridge, History, Landmarks Preservation Commission, new york city, New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission, Structural Engineering, Technology
The Brooklyn Bridge was jammed with tourists, walkers and bikers this past Sunday, the only warm, sunny day during the Christmas weekend. The temperature reached the fifties in some places. Monday, temperatures plunged back down accompanied by frosty wind. Brooklyn Daily Eagle Sphere: Related Content
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: bridge, brooklyn-bridge, christmas, Holidays, Opinions, Structural Engineering, Technology, Temperature
The Manhattan Bridge, the youngest of the four East River Bridges, will celebrate its 100th birthday on Sunday, Oct. 4. Organized by the New York City Bridge Centennial Commission, the celebration will include a parade of historic vehicles, walking and bike tours, and public discussions on the history and construction of the bridge. It will [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: bridge, East River, Fireworks, new york city, Recreation, Roads and Highways, Structural Engineering, Technology
Top left, a stereoview of the original Oak Bridge, built in the 1860s. Top right, the replacement bridge built in 1935, as seen in 2006. The stone piers and abutments, seen in the photo bottom left, are the only remaining elements from the original bridge. Bottom right, the new bridge, to be dedicated Wednesday. In [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: bridge, Calvert Vaux, Cast iron, central park, Central Park Conservancy, Design, Great Depression, new york, park, Structural Engineering, Technology
The Brooklyn Bridge is to the left, the Manhattan Bridge to the right, in this photo. Full-size image at Flikr Sphere: Related Content
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: bridge, brooklyn, brooklyn-bridge, exposition, Flikr, Full-size, image, left, manhattan, manhattan bridge, photo, right, size image, Structural Engineering, Technology
“It’s all happening, the Queensboro Bridge [aka 59th Street Bridge] is being celebrated for making it to 100! Last night some folks were treated to a fireworks show around 9 p.m. (pictured), which closed out yesterday’s festivities (though there are many more to come).” The Gothamist Sphere: Related Content
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: Fireworks, Gothamist, History, new york city, Queensboro Bridge, Structural Engineering, Technology
“In for a penny, in for a pound,” could be said for taking a risk; in for thousands of pennies could be hailed as a protest. That’s what happened at the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge when a group of motorists expressed their outrage over the imminent toll hike by paying in heaps of pennies, dimes, and small [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comment (0) Article tags: E-ZPass, Recreation, Roads and Highways, staten island, Technology, Toll road, Verrazano-Narrows Bridge
General Motors, in a relentless drive to bring America the best in deadpan humor, will debut their latest antic at the New York Auto Show this week. Together with Segway, they’ve formed the Personal Urban Mobility and Accessibility Project (or P.U.M.A. for short) and are allegedly (and on purpose) developing a self-balancing, two-wheel electric vehicle. [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comments (4) Article tags: Electric vehicle, energy, General Motors, Lithium battery, Segway PT, Technology, Transportation
clipped from www.brooklynpaper.com “As if advertising wasn’t trashy enough, a city councilman now wants to sell ad space on city garbage cans, saying that the plan could reap $2.5 million.” (The Brooklyn Paper) And all this time I had only THOUGHT it was garbage, these ads to the left of me/ right of me, sound [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comments (5) Article tags: ads, brooklyn, Brooklyn Paper, photo, Recreation, shopping, Technology, Waste container
clipped from www.mypenguintravels.com Penguin at the 125th Brooklyn Bridge Anniversary June 3rd, 2008 I just went with a pal to the 125th anniversary of the Brooklyn Bridge. How cool is that? Can you believe, 125 years? – no kidding! We hung out during the day and then stayed all the way through to the night [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comments (4) Article tags: 125th Street, bridge, brooklyn-bridge, History, humor, Jewelry, new york city, Structural Engineering, Technology
Today marks the 125th anniversary of the Brooklyn Bridge. Stretching 5,989 feet across the East River to connect Brooklyn to Manhattan, it’s one of the oldest and most famous bridges in the world. Designed by John Augustus Roebling, the bridge is one of the city’s most treasured icons and it was designated a National Historic [...]
Filed under: Postings | Comments (2) Article tags: bridge, brooklyn, brooklyn-bridge, East River, historic, History, National Historic Landmark, new york city, nyc, Structural Engineering, Technology