Archive for the ‘Manhattan’ category

New York City First Snow Day this Fall

December 2, 2007

Hurray!  It snowed.  Not a great whopper of a storm, but a nice dusting that actually stuck around for a few hours or most of the day.

Here’s a couple of shots in Tudor City on 41st Street.

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The above were taken around 9:15 am or so.  I then cut over to 42nd Street and headed westward.  As I was walking by Grand Central, I noticed a sight you’ll see everywhere that a surprise snow hits:  a woman in sandals.  Not unique to NYC as I’ve seen that sort of thing in other cities, but I always wonder about it.  It wasn’t that much of a surprise.

Speaking of Grand Central, just a wintry shot of the southwest entrance.

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I then went to Church at Times Square Church again (I’m starting to go there more regularly now).  I actually have gotten a seat twice in a row – both times in the nosebleed section, but I vastly prefer it to the annex area I used to go to in the basement.

Something you never see at Times Square Church during a Sunday morning:  a front area unjammed with people.

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It’s actually to the left of the McDonalds, but the real annex is above the McDonalds.

Don’t pay any attention to the lack of people in the front.  As usual, the service was packed!  As usual, very vibrant.

More snow postings to come, probably tomorrow.

-H

Ankling to Gracie Mansion

December 1, 2007

Gracie Mansion isn’t named after Gracie Allen (wife of George Burns), but for some strange reason I can never quite separate the two.  As a name, “Grace” is pretty common nowadays; but not “Gracie”.  Oh well, just one of my quirks.  (Actually, “Gracie was the last name of the architect, but that isn’t as fun to thing about as Gracie Allen.)

Gracie Mansion is the official residence of the Mayor of New York and has been for quite some time.  It’s located in Carl Shultz Park on the east side of Manhattan, just about at 88th Street or so.

To call it impressive, at least from the outside, is to overstate it.  The mansion is located about 20 feet from a major street, East End Avenue, and is between it and the East River.  The area itself is really nice.  The building is…yellow and pretty big.

The next picture is just in from East End.

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It’s located amidst a bunch of trees and some impressive fencing.

One of the guardhouses is right there, keeping an eye on traffic.

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The next picture is about the clearest view you can get of the place, unless you can get in.  The mansion appears to be two largish houses with some sort of connector.

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In the next pictures you can see that there are two parts to the place.

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As you can tell, it isn’t easy to see much of the place.  I don’t know if it is for security or for privacy or just an original feature to the place.  You can walk all the way around the place, but you really can’t see all that much except from the south.

Here’s a picture from the east, though.

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Here’s what you see from the north side.

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On the west side, you see little or nothing.  However, for some absurd reason I love the next picture that shows the fence within a fence.  You can see at least three different fences at different points of the perimeter.  In this, it shows what looks like an old fence that’s great for privacy and an iron fence for security.  I think the privacy fence is pretty old which would indicate it isn’t to address recent security concerns.

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If you paid close attention to the beginning you may have noted I referred to the place as the “official residence”.  Well, it isn’t the actual residence.  With other mayors it has been.  The location’s good and the place is large and that is always in short supply in Manhattan.  In fact, I think Gracie Mansion is one of the only freestanding one-family houses on the island.  I’m sure I’m wrong, but I can’t remember seeing any others.

But, for Michael Bloomberg such things as Gracie Mansion are a step down from his current place.  He’s a multi-billionaire and has no need for public housing.  I’ve heard it is in use for formal occasions but I think it would be more cool to see his real place than Gracie Mansion.

-H

Bryant Park Gift Shops

November 30, 2007

When Christmas comes to NYC, there are a number of inescapable direct commercial tie-ins.  There are the Christmas windows in the major department stores and then there are shops opening up in common areas such as Bryant Park and Union Square.

The shops are virtually all small kiosks and are open-air.  The vendors are very specialized and seem to be mom-and-pop type of operations.

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Lots of stuff that looks hand-carved.

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There’s a long line of them that goes from one side of the Library to the other…or almost all the way.

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It actually ends on the south side at a pretty large Christmas tree.

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Not as grand as Rockefeller Center’s, though.  (Note, I didn’t go to the lighting on Wednesday night.  That place is unapproachable by the time I get off work.  It’s much better to watch at home…not that I did, but it’s the only way to see that spectacle.)

The shops are also adjacent to the free ice skating rink (well, you can rent skates for a price but it’s free if you bring your own and are willing to wait to get on the ice).

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But I’ll show that in another post.

-H

A NYC Christmas Window

November 28, 2007

I need a new chair.  Hey, it’s NYC and there are lots of places to buy chairs!  Right?  Well, how come I’m having such a tough time?  Ehhh, it doesn’t matter.

I decided to go down to ABC Furniture at Broadway and 19th Street to see if they had an acceptable chair.  The store is huge (by Manhattan standards) at six floors and is about as eclectic as you could ever hope for.  The store is so eclectic, it’s on two sides of the street!  Rugs on the west side, everything else on the east.  It has a wonderful selection and has the coolest floors around.  Old stuff.  Big herringbone in some areas, creaky old floorboards painted white in others.  It isn’t your standard mall anchor store or your suburban furniture place.  Honest to goodness, the place has character.  It doesn’t, however, have a chair that I like.

Anyway, as I was leaving I started looking at their windows in the front and saw a Christmas window that beats everybody else’s.  I haven’t been by very many so far this year, but they are always similar.  This store has the one I truly love.

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It’s as if they remember what Christmas is really all about.

But you have to remember, this is NYC.  Other windows are more Buddhist and New Age than anything else and there’s an awful lot of Hindu stuff in the store.  But they did have actual Christmas music playing (not “holiday music”, but Christmas music).

-H

A Courier on 42nd Street

November 27, 2007

I don’t know if this guy is a courier or not, but I like to think of him as such.  Without a car in Manhattan, it can be tough to get packages around.  Typically, you hail a cab and hope it can fit in; or wait to get one of the few minivan cabs.  Or pay for separate delivery…at their time, not your’s.

But this guy has an alternative for a bulky package:  skate with it.  I can’t imagine it was very heavy nor breakable, but it was a cool sight to see.  It’s a little hard to grasp from the picture, but the bag was huge and bulky.  It didn’t phase the skater, though.

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-H