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Crabapple allée

May 13th, 2015



at Central Park's Conservatory Garden

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This fountain in Central Park's Conservatory Garden honors the author Frances Hodgson Burnett. The two figures in the sculpture are based on the characters Mary and Dickon from Burnett’s The Secret Garden.

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Dominoes and fragrances

May 13th, 2015



In 1972, a young man named Hank Prussing visited East Harlem to examine the area's public art for a class he was taking at the Pratt Institute. After a local pastor suggested that he create his own mural in the neighborhood, Prussing started working on The Spirit of East Harlem, about half of which you can see above, in 1973.

Manny Vega, a neighborhood kid, regularly walked by the building and saw Prussing up on a scaffold, painting. He became his apprentice after calling out to him one day: "Hey, white boy! Give me a job!" Vega later restored the faded artwork in 1998-99, adding some touches of his own. Parts of the mural disappeared a couple of years ago when some sections of the brick wall were replaced, but you can view an interactive photo of the whole thing before that happened here.

From the book On the Wall: Four Decades of Community Murals in New York City:

Until 1973, people portrayed in New York City murals were either historic and contemporary public figures or symbolic representations of neighborhood residents. The earliest portraits of actual members of the community are found in the murals of Hank Prussing and Lucy Mahler.

For his grand The Spirit of East Harlem (1973-78), artist/architect Hank Prussing spent several days and evenings taking random photographs around the mural's location, on East 104th Street at Lexington Avenue. The character, pride, and individuality of the area's Puerto Rican residents is beautifully and sensitively rendered in his life-sized and oversized portraits. The neighborhood itself is represented by a trompe l'oeil landscape of tenement buildings. Prussing sought "to celebrate the people of this particular community as they were in everyday life" rather than to create "a mural that celebrates a people's heritage and/or aspirations."

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Closer look here

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And right next door…

May 13th, 2015



A chlorophyll-themed window display

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HOME

May 13th, 2015



This mural by Axel Void is based on a 1978 photo by Martha Cooper.

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Cage turned coffin

May 13th, 2015


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The former PS 168

May 13th, 2015



The East River Family Center, a homeless shelter, now occupies this old public school. In 1976, a teenager named Randall Dana removed some gargoyles from the dormer windows of the then-abandoned building, adding them to what was becoming a massive collection of salvaged architectural ornaments from around the city. He later sculpted his own versions of the original gargoyles (1, 2, 3, 4) and now offers them for sale along with other similar works.

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Dos Alas

You can view a 3D model of the whole mural here.

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Yarn blossoms

May 13th, 2015


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by James De La Vega

This memorial is located on East 100th Street. I wonder if this Tony Lopez is the same one mentioned in this article as being the superintendent of nine buildings on East 100th Street.

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Completed in 1927, the academy's building is home to, among other things, "one of the most significant historical libraries in medicine and public health in the world". The library, which was started back in 1847, now holds more than 550,000 volumes, including an extensive rare book collection that "contains 85 to 90 percent of the medical books printed in what is now the United States between the late 17th and early 19th centuries".

There are also many historical artifacts in the library's possession, such as the lower half of a set of George Washington's dentures, made from human teeth set in hippopotamus ivory and designed to fit around the president's last remaining tooth — which, by the way, the academy also owns!

You can view some samples of the library's holdings here (relatively tame) and here (relatively gruesome), and you can see a 360-degree panorama of the beautiful rare book reading room here. You can also go visit the library in person; it's been open to the public since 1878. Just make an appointment or show up for one of the monthly tours.

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Cartas al Cielo

May 13th, 2015



This "poetic postbox" (there's a mail slot in it) in Central Park "invites passersby to send missives to those with no earthly address via a sculptural globe that reflects the earth and sky. Postcards provided."

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Bertel Thorvaldsen

May 13th, 2015



According to the Parks Department:

This bronze, life-sized sculpture is a self-portrait of the esteemed Danish sculptor [Bertel] Thorvaldsen (1770–1844), and was dedicated in Central Park in 1894. It is the only statue of an artist displayed in the parks of New York City*, and honors a titan in his field who had broad influence in sustaining the classical tradition in art. . . .

The original marble self-portrait, on which this posthumous bronze replica is based, was carved in 1839. . . . Though in his seventh decade of life when he created this work, Thorvaldsen represented himself as a younger, idealized man draped in a workman’s robe, with his hands holding the tools of his trade: mallet and chisel. His left arm rests on a small female figure, a copy of his figure of Hope, modeled in 1817.
* The only statue of an artist in an NYC park? Not even close. It may be the only statue of a visual fine artist, but there are plenty of statues of other types of artists (musicians, writers, an architect) located in city parks. Here in Central Park alone, we have Duke Ellington, Ludwig van Beethoven, Victor Herbert, William Shakespeare, Hans Christian Andersen, Robert Burns, Sir Walter Scott, Fitz-Greene Halleck, Friedrich Schiller, and Richard Morris Hunt. At the Concert Grove in Prospect Park, you can find busts of Beethoven, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Carl Maria von Weber, Edvard Grieg, Washington Irving, and Thomas Moore. There's a statue of William Cullen Bryant in Bryant Park and one of Antonin Dvorak in Stuyvesant Square. And there are probably others I've neglected to mention as well.

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Fred Lebow

May 13th, 2015



Central Park, which hosted the first few New York City Marathons in the 1970s and is still home to the final stretch of the race, is a fitting place for a memorial to Fred Lebow, the marathon's founder. But when Mr. Lebow died in 1994, a moratorium on new monuments in the park prevented a permanent memorial from being erected. So a sneaky solution was worked out: his statue is allowed to stand here as a temporary installation — and what makes it technically temporary is that it's moved from its perch once per year, when it's set up to greet runners at the marathon's finish line.

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John Purroy Mitchel

May 13th, 2015



This memorial is located on the eastern embankment of the Central Park Reservoir. The bust was sculpted by Adolph Weinman, and the granite stele was designed by Thomas Hastings and Donn Barber.

From a previous post about Mayor Mitchel:

Known as the "boy mayor", he was sworn in at the tender age of 34, making him the second-youngest mayor in the city's history, and the youngest to preside over the modern five-borough city.

An anti-Tammany reformer, Mitchel is widely considered to have been an effective and honest mayor. He was greatly admired by Fiorello La Guardia (the only NYC mayor to rank ahead of him in a "classic" 1960 study), whose mayoral speeches "rang with Mitchel's name". Teddy Roosevelt was also a big fan. Endorsing Mitchel's bid for re-election in 1917, Roosevelt wrote that Mitchel had "given us as nearly an ideal administration of the New York City government as I have seen in my lifetime, or as I have heard of since New York became a big city."

But despite his popularity among reform-minded, good-government types, Mitchel lost the 1917 race in a historic landslide. He may have been a good mayor, but he was a crummy politician — and he knew it. In fact, he had to be talked into running for a second term, as he believed, correctly as it turned out, that he would be unable to win. According to his secretary:
He knew just enough about politics to know that, unless an officeholder strives to please groups and factions to the sacrifice of real efficiency, re-election is impossible. Many times, in going over stacks of invitations, which came to him daily, I would urge him to go to this or that function, which was uninteresting and dull, but at which his attendance would please some group or section of the city. . . . He would absolutely refuse to attend these affairs, and when I would insist out of consideration for the fact that he was making political friends, he invariably replied that he had no desire to gain ground politically, that he was through with political life after this term, and that he merely wished to do the immediate job that lay before him the best he could.
Shortly after leaving office, at the age of 38 and with World War I raging, Mitchel joined the Army's aviation service. The former boy mayor thus became "America's oldest flying cadet". But just a few months later, during a training exercise in Louisiana in 1918, he fell out of his plane and plummeted 500 feet to the ground, dying on impact. He had not been wearing his safety belt.
UPDATE: Mitchel is prominently featured in a song released by Joanna Newsom in August 2015, a meticulously crafted and densely allusive track called Sapokanikan. The first lines specifically pertaining to the boy mayor start at 2:53. If you read the NY Times's account of his death — specifically, the two paragraphs before and the four after the "Joked About City Politics" section heading — you'll find a number of phrases that have made their way into the song's lyrics.

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Gazing west

May 13th, 2015



across the Central Park Reservoir toward the twin towers of the Eldorado

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Bridge No. 28

May 13th, 2015



a.k.a. Gothic Bridge

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The rim of this Central Park water fountain is inscribed with the name of the 72nd Street Marathoning and Pasta Club, "whose runners began competing around the world in the 1970s and have helped to conserve Central Park by planting trees and cleaning and restoring water fountains."

One of the club's seven original members is Jon Mendes, who's been saying he's going to retire from marathoning since at least 2003, when he finished the Marine Corps Marathon (with a time of 6:47:36) about a week before his 83rd birthday. But he has since completed the 2005 NYC Marathon (8:03:03) and, most recently, the 2011 Marine Corps Marathon (7:02:30). The day before he turned 94, he took part in the 2014 NYC Marathon with the goal of becoming the oldest finisher in the race's history, but he was unable to complete the course.

The man who currently holds the title of oldest NYC Marathoner, Josef Galia, was 91 when he completed the race in 1989 (6:43:29), and was the only one of that year's three nonagenarian competitors to finish. He had said he was going to retire after the race, but, like Mr. Mendes, he couldn't stay away. At 93, he entered and successfully completed the 1991 marathon (7:59:34), setting the record that stands today.

UPDATE: Mr. Mendes made it through more than 16 miles of the 2015 NYC Marathon, but had to drop out because of leg pain. If he's feeling well, he's going to try again in 2016, three days after turning 96.

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The Loch

May 13th, 2015



This confusingly named stream flows through the Ravine in Central Park's North Woods. According to the Central Park Conservancy:

At 40 acres, the North Woods is the largest of the three woodlands in Central Park. The Ravine is a lowland landscape in the North Woods that features a small stream, dramatic cascades, and a variety of plants native to the northeastern United States. Designed by Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux, the Ravine and the North Woods were intended to give visitors a taste of the Adirondacks without leaving New York City. . . .

The Loch: This small stream winds through the Ravine before emptying into the Harlem Meer. In Scottish, "loch" means lake, and the Loch was originally designed as a long lake. Wildlife flock to the Loch’s muddy banks, shallow pools, and tumbling cascades.

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Huddlestone Cascade

May 13th, 2015



The Loch flows over this little waterfall as it makes its way through the Ravine in Central Park's North Woods. The two vertical concrete slabs atop the falls are, I believe, part of a weir that has been temporarily installed to measure the stream's flow rate.

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Close-ups here

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141 St. Nicholas Avenue

May 13th, 2015



This well-illuminated apartment house was built in or around 1887, if the date on the facade is to be believed.

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Portal of the day

May 13th, 2015


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This Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo church was established in 2004.

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Yellow and friends

May 15th, 2015


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I have a dream…

May 15th, 2015



...of ample off-street parking.

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Liberty Rock

May 15th, 2015



Located at the eastern end of Liberty Avenue, this boulder has for decades been a symbol of Pan-African pride. It may have originally been painted by the local chapter of the Black Panther Party.

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Big Blue

May 15th, 2015



Just a little bluer than it used to be

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According to the A-frame sign in the yard, not to mention the truck parked out front, this is the home of Mr. Handyman!

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Awesome downspout #9

May 15th, 2015



You can see the whole collection here.

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Portal of the day

May 15th, 2015


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Ready to operate

May 15th, 2015



on a 1986 Nissan 300ZX

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Primordial roof support

May 15th, 2015


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183-73 Camden Avenue

May 15th, 2015



Compare to its neighbors.

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183rd Street

May 23rd, 2015



beneath the Long Island Rail Road

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Here in Hollis, Gotham Greens is constructing the 60,000-square-foot rooftop greenhouse pictured above. The company expects to grow more than 500 tons of hydroponic produce per year at this facility.

The building beneath the greenhouse was once part of the Ideal Toy Corporation's manufacturing complex. Founded by the American inventor of the teddy bear, Ideal produced many famous toys and games over the years, including Betsy Wetsy, the Magic 8 Ball, Mouse Trap, and the Rubik's Cube.

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A handsome old garage

May 23rd, 2015



Located at 89-19 187th Place, this garage looks like it may have once been a carriage house. Standing next to it on the property is a stately, similarly styled dwelling where Lawrence Gresser, who served as the fourth Borough President of Queens from 1908 to 1911, moved in with his son and spent the final months of his life before passing away in 1935.

Gresser was the third in an illustrious string of four consecutive borough presidents who were brought down by charges of corruption. Two of them ended up in prison, while another left for Italy on a steamer two hours before he was supposed to appear in front of a grand jury for questioning. Gresser, the saint of the bunch, was removed from office by the governor not because of any particular misdeeds on his part, but merely because he was deemed "inefficient and incompetent and . . . neglectful of his duty to protect the city and the Borough of Queens against fraud and corruption on the part of his subordinates".

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XooooooooX

May 23rd, 2015


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Jacked up

May 23rd, 2015



Keeping up with the Joneses? Check out these Street View photos of the next-door neighbors' driveway in 2013 ("David and Goliath") and 2012 ("Baby Hammer").

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Benigno Aquino Triangle

May 23rd, 2015





This tiny park (Street View) honors the life of Benigno Aquino Jr., the Philippine political leader and bitter foe of former Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos. Aquino's assassination in 1983 galvanized opposition to the Marcos regime and catapulted his widow, Corazon Aquino, to the presidency, which she held from 1986 to 1992. The couple's son, Benigno Aquino III, currently serves as president of the country, having been elected in 2010.

To the best of my recollection — i.e., I might be totally wrong — I believe the Philippine flag flying over the monument is the only foreign flag I've seen on display in a city park.

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91-28 184th Street

May 23rd, 2015



From the Brooklyn Daily Eagle, November 22, 1930:

Queens Boy Asked to Choose Grandmother's or Dad's Home

Francis Morra, 12, who has been living with his grandmother, Mrs. Caroline Caputo, at 91-28 184th St., Hollis, since his father and mother separated six years ago, will have to [choose] between his mother and maternal grandmother on the one hand and his father and step-mother on the other when he is taken before Justice Burt Jay Humphrey In the Supreme Court at Jamaica Monday.

Justice Humphrey yesterday reserved decision on the writ of habeas corpus sued out by the father, John Morra of Manhattan, to gain custody of the boy from his grandmother. The Justice directed the grandmother to bring the boy before him Monday, saying that he would then let the boy decide with whom he wishes to live In the future.

The grandmother stated In an affidavit that the boy has lived with her since his mother, Mrs. Sarah Morra, left her husband in 1924, after repeated beatings at his hands and threats against her life. Last September, the affidavit stated, Morra procured an Enoch Arden divorce [named for Tennyson's Enoch Arden] from his wife and subsequently married another woman, promising at that time, the grandmother said, to pay her $7 a week for the support of the boy.

He told the grandmother, according to the affidavit, that he was afraid the boy might cause trouble between him and his second wife. When Morra's first wife learned of his second marriage she went to the home of her mother and has since assisted her In caring for her son, the grandmother said.
The headline two days later: "Boy, 12, Spurns Father to Stay With Mother and Grandmother". Little Francis "said he had been happy with his grandmother and mother, and pleaded against being taken away from them."

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A spinoff of Jake and the Fatman debuting on CBS this fall.

But seriously folks.

H.G. Maybeck is a local manufacturer that has been in business since 1907 and currently specializes in laundry bags and carts. Its name doesn't show up much in the newspaper archives, but I did find an awning industry ad in the Brooklyn Daily Eagle in 1923 — "You Are Going to Need AWNINGS, ORDER NOW" — that lists H.G. Maybeck as one of the members of the Canvas Goods Manufacturers Association of Greater New York, a group of "Makers of Awnings of Dependability".

Putzmeister — which means "Plaster Master" in German, and something else in Yiddish — makes concrete pumps, primarily. The one pictured above is a relatively modest affair, but the company is best known for its extremely long boom pumps. On a number of occasions, in fact, Putzmeister machines have set new world records for pumping concrete the greatest vertical distance, with the most recent record-breaking performance of 1,988 feet achieved during the construction of the world's tallest building, the Burj Khalifa in Dubai. The company's boom pumps have also been utilized in disaster response efforts, most notably at Chernobyl, where they helped entomb the plant's damaged nuclear reactor in a concrete and steel sarcophagus, and at Fukushima, where they pumped seawater to cool the overheated reactors.

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Door-window-wall hybrid

May 23rd, 2015


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Biscuit

May 23rd, 2015


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Barberz #114

May 23rd, 2015