Like Morris and Erasmus, Newtown is one of Charles B.J. Snyder's soaring civic monuments.
Kehila Kedosha Janina is the only Romaniote (Greek) synagogue in the Western Hemisphere.
Businesses in New York are allowed to advertise themselves on their own property fairly freely. But when it comes to selling ad space to other companies, there are many regulations that must be followed, and permits that need to be obtained. This restrictiveness is intended to limit street-level visual pollution by keeping the number of ads plastered on walls to a minimum.
However, there are many, many ads in the city that blatantly violate these regulations: they advertise products and services that are completely unrelated to the businesses where the ads are located, and they have not been issued permits by the Department of Buildings. After the Public Ad Campaign brought attention to this problem by organizing a takeover of illegal billboards, the advertising companies came up with a very clever, and quite evil, workaround. They now add labels to these ads that say things like "Enter our sweepstakes inside for a chance to win these products or related prizes". Even though the ad above, for example, is obviously advertising some HBO movie, the label indicates that it's actually advertising a contest being held at this location — which is a lighting store, by the way — where the prize just happens to be the movie posters on display. Strictly speaking, this ad does not require a permit because it's purportedly advertising a prize you can win at the lighting store, rather than a movie unrelated to the store. It's an ingenious tactic, and it's also a pretty bold show of disrespect for the citizens of this city who may not want to be further inundated by slick sales pitches for crap they don't need.
Much like that of the Queens-Midtown Tunnel, the Holland Tunnel's ventilation system provides a complete change of air every 90 seconds!
This was the first H-plan skyscraper, designed to bring more light and fresh air into the building. It's currently owned by the city, and provides office space to various government agencies.
Formerly known as the Hall of Records, this building once featured 54 sculptures on its exterior. Most are still there, but some were moved during a nearby construction project in the 1960s.
Housing thirteen public agencies, the Municipal Building is one of the largest government buildings in the world. Automobile traffic once passed through the central arch, but today it's only open to pedestrians.
Home to the first production of Shakespeare in the Park in 1956 (the shows moved to Central Park the following year), this amphitheater fell into severe disrepair for decades, but it's been slowly making a comeback.
This tiny, largely unmapped two-block-long street is much closer to the Manhattan Bridge than this picture would lead you to believe.
Once part of a gun district near the old police headquarters, this store claims to be the oldest gun shop in the US.
The world's longest suspension bridge from 1903 to 1924, the Williamsburg Bridge has a very unusual design: as you can see in this photo, only the center span (the section of the bridge between the two towers) is suspended from the cables.
In the photo above, taken on the Manhattan side of the bridge, you can see the elevated pedestrian and bike paths, the roadway, and the subway tracks (currently used by the J, M, and Z trains).
Another massive NYC armory. This one sits on the southern half of the former Union Grounds (just click "reload" if the link doesn't work at first), a baseball park opened in 1862. Union Grounds was possibly the first ballpark to be enclosed by a fence, requiring spectators to pay admission if they wished to watch the game.
The location is fitting for the 15th anniversary of Biggie's death.
He's only been playing guitar for a little over a year, and was kind of camera-shy. But here's a little glimpse, anyway.
Looks like some much-needed steeple-straightening is underway! This church was built in 1853, and its first pastor gave his name to the adjacent street.