Day 103




for a sub shop.

Day 103

Bronx River Forest

April 11th, 2012



Walk it!

Day 103

The scent of laziness

April 11th, 2012



It is the inevitable fate of a staircase such as this — one shielded from the street — to smell like urine. While I am certainly aware of the dearth of public restrooms in many parts of the city, I am also aware that there are like ten million trees, including the ones from the previous photo, just steps away from here. If you're gonna micturate in public, do it right!

Day 103

The End Times

April 11th, 2012



No. 32,290,725 in the series

Day 103

New growth

April 11th, 2012


Day 103




This is the most halfhearted Tudorization I've seen so far. Take a look at the whole building.

Day 103

How sidewalks are made

April 11th, 2012


Day 103




On the site of an old Old Testament temple

Day 103




Everybody needs a backup source of income.

Day 103

VPS Security Screens

April 11th, 2012



The plywood lobby must be up in arms over this egregious foray into their territory.

Day 103

Gun Post Lanes

April 11th, 2012



So named for its location between Gun Hill Road (an important thoroughfare during the Revolutionary War, although this segment of the road did not exist then) and Boston Road (a late-18th-century rerouting of the original Boston Post Road), this bowling alley was the site of my first-ever 100+ game back in 2007 (I am terrible at bowling).

Day 103

Death Proof

April 11th, 2012



He's on the move! This photo was taken several blocks away from our initial encounter two days ago.

Day 103

Chick tract!

April 11th, 2012



We haven't come across one of these since Pennsylvania.

Day 103

Cats and dogs

April 11th, 2012


Day 103




This is the deluxe version of the original Spherical Self Portrait. It comes with a special behind-the-scenes extra: a miniature spherical gold portrait of the making of Spherical Self Portrait: Gold Edition.

Day 103




Take a peek at their feet.

Day 104

Woolworth Building

April 12th, 2012



From 1913 to 1930, this was the tallest building in the world.

Day 104

Walk this way

April 12th, 2012



Walking Men 99

Day 104

Church of St. Peter

April 12th, 2012



St. Peter's is the oldest Catholic parish in New York (though not the oldest surviving Catholic church building), and the church's founders faced some very familiar-sounding discrimination in establishing their parish back in 1785. The first American-born saint, Elizabeth Seton (whose family's former land we've walked across), converted to Catholicism at St. Peter's in the early 19th century, and, almost 200 years later, Father Mychal Judge was laid before the altar here after being killed by debris from the collapse of the South Tower of the World Trade Center.

Day 104

9/11 memorial #56

April 12th, 2012



This is a replacement for the World Trade Center cross, which stood here outside St. Peter's for almost five years.

Day 104

St. Paul’s churchyard

April 12th, 2012



There are about 800 headstones here at St. Paul's, Manhattan's only surviving pre-Revolutionary church building.

Day 104

More St. Paul’s

April 12th, 2012



Things looked a little different here in the aftermath of 9/11.

Day 104

9/11 memorial memorial #1

April 12th, 2012


Day 104

9/11 memorial #57

April 12th, 2012



Bell of Hope

Day 104

The south arcade

April 12th, 2012



This section of the Municipal Building is lined with Guastavino tiles.

Day 104

The central arch

April 12th, 2012



Automobiles once plied the pavement of this passageway through the Municipal Building. (And apparently a rare few still do.)

Day 104

New York County Courthouse

April 12th, 2012



This building is home to the civil branch of the Supreme Court of the State of New York, which, confusingly, is not the supreme court of the State of New York.

Day 104

Mazel tov!

April 12th, 2012



The city clerk's office is home to the recently renovated Manhattan Marriage Bureau — congrats to the newlyweds!

Day 104



Day 104

The cycle of Authority

April 12th, 2012



This statue and its counterpart (Authority and Justice, respectively), currently located beside the New York County Courthouse, are the two statues we earlier learned were relocated from the Surrogate's Courthouse during construction in the 1960s.

Day 104

Portal of the dead

April 12th, 2012


Day 104

Confucius Plaza

April 12th, 2012



The legendary wisdom of this ancient Chinese philosopher is probably best known to Americans as the inspiration for an endless line of sophomoric "Confucius say" jokes. My personal favorite is one my grandfather used to always tell: "Confucius say, woman who cooks chicken and peas in same pot very unsanitary." (It only works when spoken.)

Day 104

Portal of the day

April 12th, 2012



Writing in the NY Times, and referencing the City Beautiful movement, Christopher Gray says that "No project ever realized this concept of the entire city as an integrated work of art more successfully than the plaza of the Manhattan Bridge". He goes on to bemoan the deterioration of the plaza over the years, likening it to the sack of Rome. While much of the larger plaza has been lost at this point — notably the two parks that once stood at its corners — the monumental arch and colonnade have, thankfully, since been restored to a state befitting such grand architecture.

Day 104

Spirit of Industry

April 12th, 2012



The inspiration for this sculpture, like so many others in Manhattan, was Audrey Munson. Her tremendous success as an artists' model led to a brief film career, including a starring role in Inspiration, in which she became the first woman to appear fully nude in a non-pornographic American film. She also penned around 20 articles pondering the fleeting nature of human beauty and questioning its sometimes troubling role in our society. After reaching the heights of fame and celebrity, she eventually succumbed to mental illness, spending the last 65 years of her life in a psychiatric hospital.

Day 104

Moishe’s Bake Shop

April 12th, 2012



Closed for Passover, of course

Day 104

Ottendorfer Library

April 12th, 2012



Another remnant of Little Germany, the Ottendorfer Library was built in 1884 as the second branch of the grass-roots New York Free Circulating Library (whose origins purportedly lie in a sewing class teacher lending books to her students to keep them from reading cheap, sensational story papers), and it became part of the New York Public Library when the two systems merged in 1901.

Day 104

German Dispensary

April 12th, 2012



Located next door to the library, this dispensary, built to serve the needs of those who couldn't afford regular medical care, was another gift of the Ottendorfers.

Day 104

The U.S. Senate

April 12th, 2012



This oddly named apartment building honors William M. Evarts, a 19th-century senator from New York whose home once stood on this site. Before his election to the Senate, Evarts successfully defended Andrew Johnson during his impeachment trial — which, according to the NY Times, seemed like a lost cause for the president until Evarts started speaking — and thus "saved the Nation from the shame of a National act of injustice". He also served as secretary of state and attorney general, and as senior counsel for Henry Ward Beecher in the civil trial of the scandalous Beecher-Tilton affair. According again to the Times, his role in that trial, "more than any of his other public doings, fixed him in the eye of the multitude, which, of course, was hugely interested in every detail of that deplorable affair." Some things never change.

Day 104




This cast-iron fence was built around Stuyvesant Square in the 1840s, beginning the much-delayed transformation of this space into a legitimate public park.

Day 104

Second Avenue residences

April 12th, 2012


Day 104

Roosevelt Island Tramway

April 12th, 2012



Opened in 1976, the tram was intended for temporary operation until subway access to Roosevelt Island could be constructed. Its popularity, however, has kept it running as a permanent mode of transportation to the island, alongside the subway station that was eventually built in 1989.

Day 104

Day & Meyer, Murray & Young

April 12th, 2012



Portovault storage for some of New York's most valuable objects

Day 104

Muck house

April 12th, 2012



The looooong-awaited Second Avenue subway is under construction, and it shows. This is a muck house, where underground rock and debris are loaded onto trucks for removal.

Day 104

Second Avenue blasting

April 12th, 2012



Take a listen!

Day 104

A well-illuminated block

April 12th, 2012


Day 104

Brick waterfall

April 12th, 2012


Day 104

Mobile gantry cranes

April 12th, 2012



Construction of the Second Avenue subway takes on many forms.

Day 106

Another view

April 14th, 2012



of the Willie

Day 106

Sidewalk vinyl

April 14th, 2012



(And a little bit of Siamese vinyl)

Day 106

Portal of the Jay

April 14th, 2012



A troubled school for years, John Jay was closed in 2001. The Park Slope campus now hosts four smaller high schools, including the selective Millennium Brooklyn, whose opening last year brought to the fore the underlying racial and socioeconomic tensions between the existing schools and the neighborhood. Here's what some students had to say about those issues back in 2008.