Day 135




I think 19th Street, west of the BQE.

Day 135

There she is!

May 13th, 2012



Wink's long-lost companion? Lured away from him by some fast-talking, romantically scented playboy with a cabana overlooking the Gowanus Canal?

Day 135

Happy Mother’s Day!

May 13th, 2012


Day 135




with the Red Hook grain elevator looming in the background




What happens to the thousands of tons of garbage produced every day by 8 million New Yorkers?

After centuries of leaving trash on the streets to rot, and then decades of dumping it out at sea, the city began building incinerators and landfills around the five boroughs in the early 20th century. The most notable of these facilities was Fresh Kills in Staten Island, the city's primary dumping ground for many years, and at one point the largest landfill in the world.

Sanitation trucks would pick up garbage from the curb and bring it to transfer stations, like the one that formerly existed here on Hamilton Avenue in Brooklyn, where it would be loaded onto scows and shipped over to Staten Island. When Fresh Kills — NYC's last operating landfill — finally closed in 2001 (although it was temporarily reopened later in the year for sorting and burying debris from the World Trade Center), the city began trucking almost all of its waste out of state.

To reduce air pollution from truck exhaust, and to allow lower-cost transport to distant landfills (it's becoming more and more difficult to find places nearby that are willing to accept all our trash — a potentially crippling problem), the city is enacting a plan to replace those trucks with boats and trains. This facility on Hamilton Avenue is being reconstructed for the transfer of garbage onto long-haul barges, which will be able to more affordably whisk away our mounds of waste to out-of-sight lands far and wide.

Day 135

A boomerang of light

May 13th, 2012



Penetrating the darkness beneath the BQE

Day 135

1 World Unity

May 13th, 2012



Painted over the vacant apartment space above Eagle Provisions

Day 135

You heard the door

May 13th, 2012





Another Katie Yamasaki-led Groundswell mural

Day 135

Leftover matzah

May 13th, 2012



Even the birds won't touch it.

Day 135

Portal of the day

May 13th, 2012



Wagon wheel and rebar!

Day 135

These dudes again!

May 13th, 2012



I guess this guy's not as original as I thought.

Day 135

Firehouse portal portal

May 13th, 2012


Day 135

Living up to its name

May 13th, 2012


Day 135



Day 135

Our Lady’s Field

May 13th, 2012



Our Lady couldn't get better seats than that??

(Fun fact: this field is located on top of the 15th Street-Prospect Park subway station.)

Day 135

Speaking of exuberance!

May 13th, 2012



(The door at the top of the stairs does not appear to be in use.)

Day 135

Webster Place

May 13th, 2012



It's hard to believe this preposterously quaint stretch of houses is not a movie set.

Day 135

Awesome mailbox #57

May 13th, 2012





Aaron's sold women's clothing, not liquor.

Day 135

Heartbeat Brooklyn

May 13th, 2012



This mural by Samarra Khaja features a couple of familiar sights from the streets of Brooklyn, where you'll often find FDNY call boxes and USPS mailboxes chatting away as if it were their sole purpose in life.

Day 135

Our old friend William

May 13th, 2012



This icon of the borough's skyline is captured in paint on the second panel of Heartbeat Brooklyn.

Day 135

New York Old Iron

May 13th, 2012



This manic amassment of metal and mannequins, tucked away beneath the tracks of the elevated F train at the entrance to Lowe's, is actually an iron salvage yard.

Day 135



Day 135

The Gowanus Canal

May 13th, 2012



with you-know-who hovering off in the distance