8 posts tagged “new york city”
I have had quite a good streak of luck with the millions of projects I've been working on the last few months. Most of them never make it farther than my bedroom, but in some instances, they actually materialize.
Here's a review of the M.I.A. show I attended as part of CMJ this year:
http://lifeinabungalo.com/2007/10/20/mia-at-terminal-5/
Gothamist, the amazing NYC web zine has also picked up two of my photos:
The first is a shot of an amazing, unique Bay Ridge Brooklyn home decoration
http://gothamist.com/2007/10/28/extra_extra_680.php
The second is one of my 2007 NYC Marathon pictures:
http://gothamist.com/2007/11/05/running_the_mar.php
Thanks
Michael/Evil PR Guy
My favorite museum in the world is The Met? I can't remember exactly when the first time I climbed up those impressive steps and had my mind blown open was exactly, but I was a really little kid. Since the I've paid hundreds of visits, and I think I have spent more time at the place than anywhere else in New York City. I just love it. As a museum, as a hangout, as I place to learn things. As a place to be stoned. As a place to go on dates. As a place to nurse breakups. As a place to sneak away on lunch breaks. As a place to be horribly embarrassed as I fall down the daunting marble steps and do a Tommy Boy into the classical sculpture garden.
Normally, this is the part of my blog where I start to critque the Carnegie Mansion nail by nail and cornice by cornice. Today I'm going to head down a slightly different path (don't worry, you'll get my overly opinionated analysis of C-H buildings sometime soon in a different post).
Every three years a bunch of smart pants designers get together and choose amongst themselves what they think are the most interesting things going on in the world of design. There are two key concepts here. One, they use design in its' broadest sense; the exhibit has clothing, household goods, toys, models, electronic whiz-bang gizmo's and structural materials. My Italian grandmother was say, 'A brische and a brosche': a little bit of this, a little bit of that. The panel that chooses what's on display don't necesarily pick what is the 'best' in a conventional sense. They choose items that are interesting for one reason or another. I can attest tho this because quite a few of the exhibits were broken from being over examined, so they aren't the greatest designs. I give them a lot of credit for not necessarily choosing what is 'hot' right now, but going with there gut feeling for objects they clearly enjoy. This year's show, titled Design Life Now, is a gathering of items and concepts that are currently out in the world. From the second you turn the corner onto 91st Street, you know something very cool is going on. The front of the mansion is covered in brightly colored flowers from sidewalk to roof in random, occasionally overlapping patterns. The light poles, fences and walls are inundated with cool signs that feature various items featured in the exhibition, like one of my favorite, that ubiquitous creepy cartoon rabbit, Dunny. Granted, I'm extremely prejudiced towards Coney Island (it's where I met my wife), and I can never pass up a chance to mention it, but there are cool signs with the iconic parachute jump all up and down 5th Avenue proclaiming the exhibition.
I believe it's more or less impossible to describe what exactly good design is. People much smarter and more eloquent than I have written entire books on the subject and they still haven't come up with a passable answer. My criteria for something to win my good design award is pretty simple. It has to be something that I own,use and enjoy. Yeah, I'm sure Maserati's are wonderfully designed and engineered cars, but I don't have one. Hell,I don't even really know how to drive. So there's nothing on this list you won't find me rolling with on the R Train on a regular basis. It keeps things honest. The next rule is it has to do what it was born to do. Sure, Tall Bikes look a treat, but they're hard to pedal, hard to ride, don't get you where you're going any faster than walking and are dangerous as hell. Pretty but useless disqualifies items from my list. It has to be elegant. Elegance is hard to define as well, but it's a case of, 'I know it when I see it'. Elegant in form, elegant in function and elegant in looks.
The last time that I owned or wore a watch it was a Swatch, with one of those rubber 'face protecting' guards that looked like a colored washer. Swatches were considered new and 'wild' at the time, to be paired with Skidz pants and a fanny pack. I have never liked the idea of being reminded of times passage constantly a few inches from my eyes. I have also never found a watch that is cool enough for me to enjoy looking at constantly, but with a clean enough design that I would wear it every day. During a recent trip to Alessi, where I spend a large portion of my lunch breaks, I discovered the perfect watch. Alessi's Kaj watch designed by Karim Rashid (who also designed the flagship Alessi store where I found this watch). The Kaj is simple enough that it goes with just about anything I'm wearing. You can get it wet. If,(and if you're me)when I break it, Alessi will replace it. It is really inexpensive for a watch by a fantastically talented designer. More than anything, it looks really brilliant. I constantly get compliments whenever people look down at what's on my wrist. I have a black one, but it comes in quite a few other cool colors as well, the pink being especially super-fly. This is the watch that got me to start wearing the time on my wrist after 19 years going without.
To many people, a pen is a pen. It's something you buy a dozen at a time, for as cheap as possible from Staples. When you have a pen in your hand for as many hours as I do, you start to notice the huge differences between a good pen and a crappy one. At this point in my life I've experimented with thousands of pens. I've written with everything from ultra fancy Mont Blanc pens (sorry...'writing instruments') to 20 for a buck dollar store specials that contain .000007 milliters of ink and have springs that become eye poking projectiles the second time you try to click it open. No other pen I've written with can touch the one's made by the Japanese design collective Muji.Their Gel Ink Ball Point Pens are very comfortable to hold. The writing tip retracts inside the body of the pen, so you don't get broken points and leaking ink all over the inside of your bag. They actually use a quality spring, so the pen doesn't break long before the ink runs out, which tends to drive me crazy. They have a sturdy little clip for attaching them to the inside of your bag, or to the strap on your Moleskine Notebooks. They are available in six different colors, including some fun ones like purple and green. The ink goes on smooth without smudging, and dries very quickly. The clear body of the pens lets you see how much ink is left, and looks very techy for a pen. Additionally, they have little stickers that are filled with cool looking Japanese writing that I can't read. The best thing to hold your Muji pens, is the clear plastic Muji Pen case. It holds four pens, snaps shut, is clear so you can
see what pens you have with you,and is practically indestructible. What separates Muji in a big way from other contemporary design groups is the fact that there products are dirt cheap. There is really no other well designed products out in the world available for as little money as the items Muji produces. My English friends tell me there is a Muji on every corner in the UK, and Muji is hugely popular across the pond. Muji even designs and builds homes in Japan! Sadly,Muji hasn't quite made it to every corner here in the USA. I get all my Muji goodness at The MOMA Design Store, and rarely have to spend more than $2 or $3 dollars on any item.
I mention my love of all things Victorian quite often. One great Victorian custom that I wish would make a comeback is the concept of The Calling Card. 'Miss Dickinson, while you were out taking a turn around the Pump-Room, Red Whiskers paid a call. He left his calling card for you Miss'. Now that's sexy. Sure,most of us have business cards, but what about cards for purely social reasons? This is a wonderful concept. There's something sweet and endearing about meeting a new person and have them hand you a card with all their contact information that doesn't center on what they do for a living. Flickr, the amazing, free, photo sharing site and Moo, have helped bring back calling cards with a 21st Century twist. Moo allows you to choose any of your photos from Flickr, and have them printed up as terrific, high quality mini calling cards. You can choose as many images as you like for the front side, and Moo will give you an equally distributed amount of each image in your pack of cards. Even though they are tiny, Moo provides enough room on the backside for all your contact infomation: name, mobile number, Blackberry, email and blog adress. They also give you the option of putting a big Creative Commons license symbol on the rear as well, to show people you meet that you support the open and fair exchange of information. The bright pictures and odd size of the cards really make them stand out from the drab business cards that most people use. Also, if you put a photo of yourself on the
Remember the days of Floppy Disks? No? I guess I am getting old. Once upon a time, like when I was in college, and men wore powdered wigs and monocles, everyone carried around their documents, pictures and character files for the video game Wasteland on floppy disks. These behemoths could a wopping 1.44 megabytes of information. They also loved to stop working whenever you needed to access something important, like a great poem you'd just written or a downloaded list of cheats for Castlevania. Really, the only good thing about floppy disks is that they were portable. My Verbatim U3 USB Drive is a geeky little piece of wizardry that I never leave home without. Contained on this microscopic hunk of silicon are several collections of my poetry, a copy of my resume, a couple dozen photos of my various engineering projects, a few photos of myself (you never know when you may need to whip up a profile for something on the fly), a couple of E-Books, a video of me giving a poetry performance, a copy of my phone book and address book, as well as a fully functional open source word processor and a copy of Firefox that loads right from this drive. More or less, I have a stripped down version of my Macbook with all my favorite and important documents that takes up almost no space and works with nearly any computer on the planet. I like to think of this little drive as my electronic Swiss Army Knife, because it can get me out of almost any computing jam, any time or anywhere. If someone would like a copy of one of my poems (probably a mentally ill pervert...) I can just give them one on the spot. If I meet someone interested in one of my bicycle frame designs, I can pull up the photos and plans immediately. If I need a phone number, it's there. Conversely, if there's a document, photo, song or webpage I'd like to hang onto for later, I can just pop it in my drive and make a copy. I like my Verbatim drive because it's large (1 GB), it has a cap for the plug side, a handy lanyard for attaching it to the inside of my bag so it doesn't get lost, and it was absurdly cheap. Actually it was free, I bartered building a set of wheels for someone and they gave me the drive. It is cheap at a store though. I don't know why everyone isn't carrying these around at all times.
I enjoy my I-Pod quite a bit, but truthfully there is no substitute for listening to the radio. I'm not being nostalgic either. There's something special about radio occuring in real time that separates the experience from that of listening to pre-recorded music. Here in NYC, we're lucky enough to get a decent signal from WFMU (91.1), which has some of the most brilliant entertainment available in any format today, as well as our local NPR station WNYC (93.9). Those two station alone make it worth my while to have a radio. I realized that the junkie tuner built into my all in one stereo just wasn't cutting it, when I discovered this gorgeous beauty pictured on your left. The Dolmen Mini Radio designed by Rene Adda is so absolutely stunning that I would keep it on my desk if it did absolutely nothing. However, it is a radio as well as a funky looking box. A damn good radio at that. The controls are simple, with shiny chrome buttons for on and off,AM or FM, as well as volume up and down.It's is a very simple device without a million useless features that have parts that can break. The speaker is surrounded by more chrome, and a gigantic tuning knob sits on top of the shiny chrome plate at its' top. The antenna goes up and down to make it easy to take the Dolmen along with you. Which is further simplified by the fact that it runs on batteries. Having lived through both 9/11 in close proximity and The Great New York City Blackout (during which I passed a kidney stone) I can really appreciate the usefulness of a battery powered radio. Really though? It's the color. Have you ever seen a blue so fantastic as the blue on this radio? I'll admit, sometimes I just want to lick it, because I know anything edible this color blue would just taste so good. Like the wonderfully blue Boo-Berry Cereal. I saw the color of this radio from across the store, before I even knew it was a radio, but my mind was made up. I would have that blue thing, whatever it was! It makes me happy every morning just to see it hanging out on my desk, playing NPR while I drink my coffee.
Riding a bicycle has been my primary means of transportation my entire life. I've never had a car. Getting around New York City by bicycle is hyper efficient, and once you've honed your survival skills it's actually a swinging good time. Getting around by bike presents a whole series of challenges. Where do I lock my bike up? What kind of lock do I use (simple,the Kryptonite NYC Fugghedabout Chain and a Guard Gate Keyed padlock)? What kind of tires? What's the one burning questions that's always on every riders mind? What do I wear? I really have pondered this question for years, and until recently I could never find the perfect pair of riding pants. Chrome's Shins Riding Knickers are the ultimate pair of urban riding pants. To start with they are shants - short pants. They come to about mid calf,so they don't get caught in the drivetrain, but long enough to protect your legs from scratches and gunk. They are also the correct length so you don't look like an asshole when you're off the bike. The have a very, very thin chamois. [Emily Dickinson's Educational Tip of the Day: A chamois, pronounces sham-mee, is basically an ass pad that is usually built into 'real', ie spandex, ie embarrassing cycling shorts to prevent excess wear and tear on your booty during long rides. Yes, I wear those shorts when I'm on my road bike.]
Because the chamois is much thinner than the type usually found in cycling shorts, it works while the pants are able to remain baggy, you can wear underwear if you so choose (although the last time I wore a pair at any time they had Yoda on them), and when you are off the bike getting a beer or shopping for books, you will be spared the ridicule of people thinking you are wearing an adult diaper. These shants are slightly stretchy thanks to the crazy nylon/spandex blend they are made out of, wind proof yet breathable and water resistant. Amazingly, if you get these suckers drenched in a rainstorm, they dry out cartoonishly fast. Almost like magic. However, it's the little details only a rider can appreciate that make these pants truly perfect. They are cut higher in the back, than in the front so your ass doesn't hang out of the back when you stand up on the pedals or get down in the drops. That is pure genius. The belt loops are enormous, and ridiculously reinforced so you can ride around all day with your Kryptonite chain pulling on your belt and not rip the belt loops off. Genius. The pockets zip closed
so that your keys, change and i.d. don't go flying onto Madison Avenue when you have to jam on the breaks to avoid being crushed between Mister Softee and some douche in a Bentley talking on a cell phone and fingering his trophy wife. Most riders in NYC know it's a good idea to blackout the logoes on your bike with tape or reflective strips,so everyone thinks your Sachs is a $20 Huffy, and Chrome has gone through the trouble of doing that for you with your shants. There is just one very tiny, tasteful, embroidered logo on the front of one pant leg. In this day and age of 'branding' every single inch of everything, it's great to find a company that lets the quality of its' products, not a bunch of tacky logos do its' advertising. The best thing about my Chrome Shants is that I can lock up my bike, walk into a bar and hang out all night, and not only will no one suspect that I'm wearing cycling clothes, but I'll get compliments on the 'cool shorts' I'm wearing. That NEVER happens with cycling clothes.
I really searched high and low for a case for my Blackberry. I'm serious. I dragged my wife in and out of least 20 different stores in Manhattan and Brooklyn searching for a case. It seems the only case available for this Blackberry is that corny 'Mr. Businessman' fake leather holster with the belt clip. I'd rather just use a brown paper bag, thanks. I'm sure there is some turn of phrase or hackneyed saying for this, but I found a brilliant case five doors down where I work, which was of course the last place I looked. Mt good friends over at BAPE hooked me up with this out of control blue ape camo Blackberry case. Like every other thing A bathing Ape makes, it looks too sick for words, and there are probably only 4 of them in the entire universe. I'll vainly admit I like being the only kid on the block with a camo BAPE Blackberry case. It gets oohs, ahhhs and 'Where'd you get thats?' every time I take it out of my bag.
Let's face it folks, America is a bunch of fatties. I don't begrudge anyone else their right to be as huge as they like (although I do think it's fairly sad that heart disease related to obesity is the number killer of Americans). Go ahead and grab that fourth half-gallon of heavy cream for your cereal. What I do hate is the fact that nearly every piece of clothing, in every store in the US is sized for fat people. I'm tall (6'1") and pretty thin (160 pounds)and it is like Khe San trying to find a pair of pants that fit me correctly. Every pair I try on are either way too baggy and big around the waist, or if I can find a pair that fits my waist they are too short. All pants seem sized to fit pear shaped men with huge guts (and these men would seem to love pleats as well). Cue the Busby Berkly whirling stage sets, and in steps my hero J. Lindberg. My J. Lindberg pants fit me so perfectly, it is as if Gepetto, g-d of tailors, descended from on high and and sewed them directly on to my legs. Neither too baggy, nor too tight, they have that custom tailored look and feel. Every seam and stitch is perfect and there is not a stray thread anywhere. These pants have two metal buckles on the inside of the waist band for good holding power, but they can't be seen on the
'Lost Girls' is a brilliant masterwork by Alan Moore and Melinda Gebbie which depicts the erotic adventures of three young women. These aren't just any three young women. The three volumes of this graphic novel focus on Dorothy Gale from The Wizard of Oz, Wendy Darling from Peter Pan and Alice from Alice's Adventures in Wonderland as they journey into their sexual awakenings. Physically, the three hardcover, slip cased volumes are quite dramatic looking with gold leaf all over the place, lush full color illustrated pages and heavyweight paper, and uniformly lovely dust jackets. It's the type of book that would get pride of place on any shelf, and begs to be stared at. What's between the covers will just stop you dead in your tracks. Genius is a rare commodity, and a genius doing his best work is a rare force of nature that absolutely alters everything it contacts. 'Lost Girls' is an example of such a phenomenon at work. From the minute I laid eyes on this set I knew I was on to something special, and it is indeed special. This will most likely be remembered as the best work from one of the greatest writers of comics to ever live.
I'd love to hear your thoughts on this, and any other subject so feel free to email and blow up my Blackberry or comment here until your fingers fall off. Until next time...
Cheers
Michael (aka Sexy Jesus aka Emily Dickinson)
emilydickinson at gmail dott com
Ripping on tourists is one of the most popular ways New Yorker's kill time when riding on the subway. It's nearly as popular as complaining about your apartment, complaining about hipsters moving into your neighborhood and ruining it,complaining that the people who live above you are loud, complaining that your favorite bar
is getting over run with hipsters, trashing Mike Bloomberg and waiting for the Second Avenue Subway Line to open up. We all do this even if we pretend to be nice and deny it. It's a superiority thing. Real New Yorker's like nothing better than mercilessly mocking some pale Midwestern family because of their Wal-Mart sneakers, loud chatter about the Toy R Us with the ferris wheel inside it (A Ferris Wheel! Can You Believe it?), 5 for $10 I Love NY T-shirts (We should cut some slack on this one, it is Milton Glaser) and looks of confusion in the 42 Street transfers. We assume anyone living West of Newark is a countrified rube who eats hushpuppies and drives a tractor to Denny's for a big night out. Truthfully it's a defense mechanism. It's a way for us to justify paying un-g-dly sums of money for tiny, loud, inconvenient apartments with major flaws.It helps us feel alright about $3.00 packs of gum and Prada shoes. We must all make it known,loudly, that we are not the suckers.
For tourist mocking, there is no place anywhere in the boroughs which compare. We all claim to avoid Times Square religously. I often make jokes that I never travel above 14th Street, and my fellow New Yorker's nod in agreement. Heading out to Times Square is one thing, but heading out to Times Square with a side trip to Rockefeller Center on a Sunday two weeks before Christmas? Surely, that would be suicide for my New Yorker credentials. I would be forced to turn in my Metrocard and uppity sneer at once. I recently found myself in Times Square, and Rockefeller Center, on a Sunday afternoon right before X-mas. The reasons aren't important. It had something to do with blood relations, grown men wearing skimpy Julie Taymor half lion fur costumes, an Italian steakhouse and knockoff Gucci bags. The point being I was there.
Armed with my trusty Nikon D70S, I thought back to a time long before my time, when The Times actually were in Times Square, and architects built beautiful buildings drowning in details.
seen numerous accidents occur because people are attempting to drive and watch the tv screen ads simultaneously. Now you know why I feel so safe on my bike, as jerkoffs from Connecticut fly down Broadway in their Hummers' chatting on their cell phones, smoking cigarettes, fiddling with the radio, blowing coke, getting blowjobs and watching the tv screens - simultaneously. Oh yeah, and driving too.
This picture (DSC0435) struck me as the stock
Andrea Palladio would be very proud with the facade of the former Lyric Thater. Now part of the Ford Center, architect Victor Koehler put up this mini Neo-Classical suprise in 1903, and it has been delighting theater patrons ever since. Koehler's proportions on the triple arches are exquisite, and detail (look out for deer and snakes) in the carvings is so fine it is hard to appreciate from street level using the naked eye. I'm also not able to ascertain the three gents residing in the alcoves.
If it isn't bad enough that entire Theatre District has fallen victim to plastering advertising on every available surface, it has also fallen victim to doing the same with its' historic intellectual property. The grandly named New Victory Theatre was recently renames the Hilton Center For Performing Arts. This trend is tragic in a way, especially considering all the wonderful Neo-Classic names given to New York Theaters over the last millennium, such as the Apollo Theater (their spelling not mine), The Lyric and The Empire. Now all we get are crummy corporations monikers withe equally as worthless remodeling jobs. The New Victory was completed in 1899 by Albert Westover, who is well known for being one of the first architects to design movie theaters when movies were brand new, and still called 'moving pictures'. This is one of the highlights of Westover's career, and the New Victory defines the word grand to a 'T' (it even received on of the coveted and stingily granted larger sized pictures in the final guide written by my boys, Willesnky and White). Pay special attemtion to the glass canopies above the entranceway, which are tastefully light by rows of bulbs in arches that seamlessly blend into the detailed stonework beginning at the second floor. Peeking out from above the canopies, observing the lines of tourists
waiting to get inside, are sculpted heads of Hermes and Athena, which fit in well with the original victory motif. The balustrade is separated from below by four smaller goat heads, a symbol of victory as week. Your charming author also happens to love goats, was once butted by a goat the Prospect Park Zoo, and would keep a goat with a very long beard as a pet if it were allowed to do so in Brooklyn. Oscar Hammerstein said of the New Victory, "The perfect parlor theater...a drawing room of the drama dedicated to all that is best in dramatic and lyric art." It's hard to get a better endorsement of your good taste than Oscar Hammerstein, eh?
't really need through gimmicks like flashing lights and corny video game characters with 'rebellious attitudes'. Our generation is so deprived of good signs, we don't even get to have simple historic brass markers that let us know that we're in Times Square, which is called Times Square because because it is where the New York Times' Offices were located. This is the same reason that Herald Square is known as Herald Square, because in the past, the offices of the New York Herald were located there. I learned those two facts while riding an uptown 'R' train several years ago. The motorman was quite talkative, and gave a little speech at each stop, where he explained to all the passengers how Herald and Times Squares received there names. He was the only motorman I've ever heard do that in all my years riding the subway, and what's more, he actually spoke in such a way I could clearly understand what he was saying. That's the real miracle here.
This nicely carved urn, on an otherwise non-descript office building, reminded me of the troubled Euphronius Krater at the Met. Inspired by the urn, John Keats poem, 'Ode on a Grecian Urn' is a fine example of how art of one stripe, a drinking cup, inspires art of another stripe, a poem. This decorative brick is a further example, whereas a poem or an urn, inspires an architect to bring a little bit of Keat's into his building, and into everyone's day that walks past.
When I was a teenager Times Square was SCARY. People often reminisce wistfully for the 'Deuce of the past. Now I'm no fan of the gross, sterile,commerce and advertising driven 42nd Street that is Mayor Giuliani's legacy the city. On the other hand, I can now make my trips to the Playpen without dodging bullets, aggressive syringe wielding beggars and cops who shake down scared
The Music Box Theater is somewhat low key for a Broadway theatre. Unrestrained gaude and lights a plenty are the usual order of the day, so this Federal Revival facade is a nice change of pace from its' neighbors. I especially like the row of dormers jutting out from the roof. The Music Box was designed by Crane and Kiehler and completed in Broadway's first heyday in 1920.
I was hoping that this wooden soldier would come to life, and begin attacking the mobs of revelers with his drumsticks, beating them away from the tree. This Sunday also happened to be the day a Tuba Convention was scheduled. I'm not kidding. Just to add to the chaos, there were several hundred people blaring on tubas, and a man singing who had the worst voice I have ever heard perform in public. This combination hurt not just the ears, but the soul as well. Rockefeller Center at Christmas is scarier than any horror movie made in the last 10 years.
One thing you can always count on in New York City is diversity. Here's a woman wearing a garbage and nothing else. The light from this photo comes from the windows of a store where they sell shoes that run $2,000 (USD) a pair. She is about to be arrested by the police, and is surrounded by people dropping $6 (USD) a cup for hot chocolates. Maybe someone should show her the true meaning of the holiday and help her out?
On the bike front...Pedicabs, or pedal taxis have been in the news quite a bit lately. We've heard cabbies complain about them, saying they are stealing there business. Drivers in the city are complaining that they are unsafe and take up too much room (less room than your SUV, but hey, who measuring right?). Cycling and environmental advocates say they are a great solution to traffic and exhaust problems. Who knows. If you've been reading BBB for a while, you'll have seen me mention these way before the 'real' news guys caught on. I used to work as a bike mechanic at one of the only shops in the city that would touch one of these, so I've met and spoken with the drivers for quite a while and I definitely side with them. I'm also someone who rides a bike in New York City a few thousand miles a year, so I'll always side with the cyclist. Now this picture is something a bit different on the pedicab front. The Eight Person Bike!
From Wild Neon signs, to monocles, Neo-Classical facades and crackheads riding 8 person bicycles, such ends another installment of Bikes, Books and Buildings. Thanks for reading about my adventures as I wander around New York City with my trusty Nikon documenting architecture, bike culture and interesting goings on. Thanks for wasting some time with me.
This might totally be conjecture, but in the past,advertisements had to serve some useful purpose to get people to look at them. Thus, clocks, bearing the name of a company, such as this one for the now defunct then resurrected New York Sun newspaper. According to my ever present buddies Willensky and White, the Sun used to be published here a long time ago. The paper has returned to life, just not here. You can fake the amazing verdigris patina on the copper clock jutting out from the second story of a building on Broadway, just North of City Hall Park. There are quite a few 'ad-clocks' scattered around the city, but this one is my favorite.
I draw a very thick black line (a Magnum in fact), between good graffiti and bad graffiti. Bad graffiti makes any neighborhood look like a slum. Good graffiti is art, no questions. The rarest graffiti of all, is clever graffiti. Clever graffiti is rare, because most folks compelled to write on walls are just not the sharpest knife in the drawer. There are exceptions, like whoever wrote these beauties across from the Sun Clock. Reading these put a huge smile on my face. These graffitos (that's actually the plural of graffiti the noun, believe it or not) are little bits of urban poetry. Cheers to writer who put these up.
Rust is one of the more obvious and beautiful signs that entropy and decay are always at work - they don't get a day off. This building is one of the many Cast Iron Front buildings scattered around Manhattan. Most are in the SoHo Historic District, but you can find a few others around the city,like this rusting beauty. This construction method was a cheap, fireproof way of making the facades of buildings beautiful. The architects cast columns and beautiful details into the iron, and it gives them a very Palladian look. I enjoy them more when they're like this chap, rusty, than its' constantly over painted sisters up North in SoHo.
These beautiful caryatids are resting on the seconds story of an old warehouse building on Broadway. Did you know caryatids are always female? That's something I just learned too. Caryatids are somewhat in short supply in NYC, but these are an amazing example left over from the time when people thought buildings in New York should be beautiful, not just expensive. I'll be on the lookout for more caryatids,so let me know if you see any in your neighborhood. For now, I have a huge schoolboy crush on these ladies.
I've been rock climbing since 1999, and to be honest Manhattan isn't best place in the world to be a climber. Sure, we have Rat Rock and Cat Rock in Central Park, which are great for bouldering, and The Gunks are only a 90 minute bus ride away, but we are short on natural rock. My main climbing partner, who I'll just identify as Mr. IT was a somewhat insane guy. He was incredibly smart, and ran the IT Security division of a huge brokerage house downtown. Once I visited him at his apartment, and he showed me a bank of hard drives that contained over a 1,000,000 MP3's he had cleaned out and collected from the hard drives of everyone at the enormous company he worked for. He of course kept them,and has an outstanding computer jukebox with every song you could ever imagine. Mr. IT and I climbed a lot, at least 2 or 3 times a week, so at times we definetly got bored with what Central Park had to offer. He called me one afternoon, and said he has a new outstanding climbing spot we had to check out, and asked me to meet him at Union Square at 9 that night, with my climbing gear. I assumed he had found a new gym or some other indoor spot to check out, which was odd, because we both hate climbing indoors and only do so when we the weather was horrific and we were dying for a fix. We met up and Union Square, headed a few blocks South,and around the block.
We ended up at Grace Church. Mr. IT proceeded to outline a route up the side of the
The Church, and its' attendant rectory are my favorite religious building in the City, which says a lot, considering the vast amount of choices. This Gothic Revival masterpiece is amazingly well kept, the grass is always inhumanly green and it's very easy to gain access for tours. I don't reccomend climbing up the side, but if you do, we left a little 'present' for any other souls adventurous enough to mimic our adventure. If you let me know what it is, I'll take you out for a beer.
It's a pretty huge intellectual jump from the Gothic Revival Grace Church to this Bauhaus inspired modern building. I haven't been able to track down any specific information on this place, but I think it's quite outstanding for a modern building. The clock at the top floor is a unique touch, and much better than that monstrous, hideous, 'clock' around the corner at the Virgin Megastore. The stainless steel facade at the ground floor makes it nice to pass by at street level, and I'm very impressed by the staggered pattern of the windows. This is quite a unique building. I'm attempting to track down the architect, and I'll let you know when I do. Hyper modern architecture can end up in the gutter so fast, but here we such a fine example of how it can be beautiful, and stand out on the block without sullying its' connected neighbors. Cheers to the mystery architect on this one.
Pete's Tavern appears in some O. Henry stories, and was supposedly his hangout when he was in Manhattan. While I love the way the building looks, and the interior is even better, it is an overpriced tourist trap, with only so-so Italian food. It's a great looking building, aside from the tacky moniker 'The Tavern O. Henry Made Famous' on the awning. However, since it was built in the 1840's, and it's still here, it is a real 'Old Bar', which are in short supply. Accoridng to Willensky and Whitem, the story that O. Henry wrote Gift of the Magi here is pure fantasy. They just don't build gorgeous bars like this anymore. I have to add though,
One of my favorite fantasies involves the idea that I'll someday own my home in New York. Fat Chance. With the NYC real estate market starting at about half a million bucks, it just won't happen. If I were to win the lottery though, this is what I would buy. I've been in love with this funny little building since I was 19.
I'm not certain, but I feel that this must have been a carriage house for a larger building that is no longer in existence. The details are outstanding. The funny, ziggurat like roof reminds me very much of the canal
houses in Amsterdams' Red Light district. The wrought
iron double hearts, and the circular hole between them show that someone
put quite a bit of love and care into the design of this little palace. The wooden detailing below the emphasizes the small physical size, but grand stature that dwarfs its' neighbors. The offset triple window, and planter box that is always filled with something pretty make this totally unique, and pleasure at street level. The twin lamps guarding the red door, and ironwork above the door make my heart melt.
You can even see the capstone above the door beneath the iron work. I'm not sure what to call this building, but the Dutch influence is heavy throughout. It really does bring me back to all the good times I've had wandering Centruum stones out of my mind. I've never seen anyone coming in or out of this place, but I am hugely curious at to who is lucky enough to live here. Part of me hopes it may be The Witch of the Ladies Mile, or possibly a mad professor. If a miracle
On the left is another Dutch style 'canal house', that I also enjoy walking past. It manages to stately without being stuffy, which is a hard line to tread. The offset, leaded windows are also a treat. This section of Manhattan,officially The Ladies Mile Historic District, has at least a few gorgeous structures on every block. Sadly, it's in danger from over zealous development. How could anyone be greedy enough to destroy these gorgeous building to put up ugly condos for he sake of a few blocks? It seems people are hellbent on developing every part of the city until it's as ugly and homogeneous as the Upper East Side. Beat that shit back uptown!
Take notice of the fine patterned brick work, and inset stone sculpture at the
apex of the house. It looks like it's some type of family crest, or more likely the symbol of a club that
When I mentioned the Cigar Store Indian earlier, I compared it's vague racism to that of
Most row houses are nearly identical, design wise. This one is a bit different at the roof. We have a cool stepped gable, with a very large quadruple windowed dormer.I enjoy buildings that stray from the norm, especially when done with taste.
This building on the right is chock full o' details
that you don't see everyday. Over the door is a brick
arch that has a tile mosaic of animals, and a cool looking lantern. There is n arch shaped piece of stone sculpture hanging on the wall at the left, and some stone lions guarding the wall in front of the building.I often mention Hundertwasser in my writings. He's one of my favorite architects, and for many more reasons that the buildings he designed. He had quite a few unique ideas that I love. One of these ideas is his 'Window Rule'. Basically, the 'Window Rule' is the idea that people living in a building have the right, and should be encouraged too, decorate the area outside their apartment windows, as far as they can reach with their arms. This encourages people to make their homes unique. This building here, as well as some of the other details I've pointed out in this post, remind me of that idea. I'm glad people still want to express their uniqueness by decorating where they live with fantastic details.Everyone in NYC should take pride in where they live, and show they live there by adding details and decorations.
Here's two more closeups of this fine detailing for you to enjoy.
As usual, my walk ended up at my friends apartment of 19th street for a visit, discussing the days' newspaper and grabbing a drink with my buddy. Over the years I have been blown away by the view of from his apartment windows, of which there are 5 in the living room alone. I'm jealous. My friend ignores his view, but I feel it is my duty to exploit for everyone else enjoyment, including mine. The Empire State Building is still an outstanding skyscraper. The prototypical one if you will. Even though it costs a bundle, the creepy Helmsley's still light it up every night, end even change the light colors depending on the various holidays and seasons of the year.Being close to X-mas, it is of course red and green at
this time of year.
It's still hard to beat the feeling of insignificance a skyscraper can bring upon you. I imagine it's how ancient Romans felt inside the Pantheon. Spooked by the gods.
I really enjoy discovering the little tiny details in New York's architecture. Finding the unknown bits is rewarding for me, and I like spreading the knowledge.
Until next time...Et In Arcadia Ego. -Michael
This afternoon I was on my way back from the Fort Hamilton Post Office, walking along Fifth Avenue in Bay Ridge when I noticed some very thick, black smoke pouring out of an MTA access way in the street. People working in the stores and shopping along
Fifth Avenue were stopping to gawk, just as the New York Fire Department showed up and started gathering around the smoking hole. Shortly after my man Con Ed rolled up in a van, and one of their techs actually went down into the hole. The NYFD started putting up caution tape, and pushed all of us back onto the sidewalk on the other side of the street.
Over the years my curiosity has served me well, and gotten me into trouble. When I have my camera with me, which is almost all of the time, I feel compelled to rubber neck and snap photos of anything that looks interesting. Playing Henri Cartier-Bresson
Even with the fireman about, and Con Ed standing around, the smoke was getting thicker and the smell was getting worse. My curiosity told me I should hang around, at least I would have something interesting to tell my wife when I got home. I've noticed, since I started carrying a camera everywhere the last few months, that when you're watching the world through a viewfinder it seems surreal, and brings about a degree of disconnect no matter how close you are to the action. This can be a both a positive and negative things, as I have heard Jim Nachtwey discuss with elegance. I was too busy lining up shots and checking the light to notice just how many people had stopped their lives to watch smoke pouring out of the street. I'd like to say it's something you don't see everyday, but in Brooklyn, it something you see about every other day.These photos were taken in very bright afternoon sunlight,
although it appears it's dark out. That's how much smoke was building up in the streets. Since it was
mainly chemicals and metal that was burning, the smoke
was much heavier than air, and it sunk and covered the
street, bringing dusk an hour or so early. It reminded me a lot of the way lower Manhattan smalled on 9/11, just less dense. It's a an odd smell, and one that's hard to ever forget.
One very drunk white guy in his 40's kept trying to cross the caution tape trying to get to a bar. He told me he stepped outside to have a smoke, no bad pun intended, and now he was stuck on the wrong side of the line and his beer was getting warm. We've all got our priorities, and nobody wants their $4 dollar beer getting warm.
On the left, you can see my new Chasidic buddy. We started chatting,and after spending a few years living in Kensington, Brooklyn, I picked up a lot of Yiddish and Hebrew slang, so we quickly became disaster buddies. I told him I was in architecture school, and he asked if I ever worked down in the subways. Nope - those are the engineers, so I was basically as clueless as he was, though I imagined that it was a transformer burning up, because there aren't too many thing underground that can cause a fire like this.
Then my buddy pointed to the hole and said, 'Look! Look! There are flames shooting out! Quick! Take a picture! Take a Picture!'. He was correct. Large flames were indeed shooting out of the hole in the street.
It's fairly difficult to take a good picture of an oscillating flame from 30 feet away, but I did my best.
I knelt down,shot the zoom all the way out and hit the shutter as fast as my camera would let me. I'm pretty
certain that the fellows from Con Ed had abandoned ship by now and gotten out of the hole, because even the NYFD were backing up at this point. Me and my Chasidic pal probably should have done the same.
The smoke wasn't quite as dense as it was a minute before, but the flames were large and jumping a good 3 or 4 feet above the street at times.
There was a festive mood on Fifth Avenue. The jolly Chasid, the Man Who Wanted His Beer Before It Got Warm, a beautiful Eastern Euro woman in fishnets, some kids from the Catholic school up the street, the woman from Dunkin Donuts eating munchkins outside the store, Con Ed and the Fire Department. With the Christmas decorations hanging above the street from the light posts, the fire fit right in.Nothing brings strangers together like a blaze.
A second later, an ear shattering explosion ripped through the air. All the manhole covers I could see in front of blew open and flew up into the sky. The oxygen got sucked out of the atmosphere where we were standing. Every car alarm for blocks went off all at once. Some type of powdery, but slightly substantial debris flew into my face, My Chasidic buddy grabbed my parka and screeched like a little girl. The crowd turned from jolly to panicking in a heartbeat. The lights went out in some of the stores and buildings. People began running down the side streets. The firemen hit the deck. Things went to shit quickly. More smoke poured out of the mystery hole.
I figured out that the crud that hit me, and was resting in my hair and on my face, was actually broken pieces of asphalt from where the manhole covers had ripped from their moorings before flying into the atmosphere. Luckily, they landed on parts of the street that were not occupied by any of out merry band of gawkers. Flames continued flaming for another few minutes, and they the firefighters started spraying foam down the hole. I have quite a bit of respect for the NYFD - I wouldn't want to stand that close to a hole that contains elements of physics powerful enough to dislodge a blocks worth of manhole covers.
Fifth Avenue slowly started to inch back to normalcy.
As you can tell from the photo on the right here, it was a bright sunny afternoon,
but the smoke from the fire really changed the physical
appearance, and made it appear quite dark. I haven't gotten the 'Official' scoop from the 'real' news as to what actually blew up down there, but I'm certain the local Bay Ridge papers will have quite a bit to say about this. I didn't notice any of there reporters on the scene, but then again, I think they just make up their stories anyway.
Once again, I have cheated death. My own curiosity got me sprayed with burning asphalt, inhaling toxic fumes and dodging flying 75 pound manhole covers. I wouldn't trade it for anything.
I've never attempted to hide my geekiness. I played enough D and D growing up that I could have mastered several instruments in the equivalent time. I have participated in Magic: The Gathering Tournaments. With the help of my brother, I have sadly intimidated people younger than me while playing Magic The Gathering. I'm way, way, way into Road Bikes. I ride somewhere around 250 miles a week. I wear spandex shorts, cycling jerseys, funny little cycling hats with matching socks.
I stay up until 4 o'clock in the morning so I can watch the Tour De France on the internet on what is the equivalent of a 3 inch screen. I even shave my legs dammit. Although I end up looking like Jason Voorhees has jumped into the bathtub with me, I do it nonetheless. Now that I've put my own geekiness out on the table for everyone to see, I'd like to take the liberty to rip on another sect of obsessive weirdos that I'm not apart of.I was walking down to water this afternoon to continue my sketching and photo project about the Verrazano Bridge, when I came to the corner of 86th Street, which
I was curious to see what this was all about. Was Bono giving out free handjobs? Was Beyonce going to sit on the faces of the first 200 people in line? Was Mayor Mike holding a housing lottery where the first fifty people would get the chance to purchase an apartment for less then $1,000,000 (USD)? After a few questions, I learned it was none of those things.
These fanboys were waiting for a shot to buy a Playstation 3. I asked the fellows at the head of the line how long they had been there. Since Tuesday! This was Thursday afternoon. I asked when the Playstation 3's would go on sale. Saturday! I am amazed by their
commitment on one hand, but I am somewhat disgusted by the whole scene on the other. What bothers me most is these poor folks have been duped into sacrificing days of their lives just for a chance to get a product from some horrible corporation that could give two shits about them. Sony sues grandmas who use Limewire. They package spyware in their legitimate software. Sony are a bunch of creeps. The people waiting in line gain nothing but a chance to blow their money. That's scary. It's not like waiting in line for a concert ticket, where your wait will hopefully get you a unique and worthwhile experience.Something you'll hopefully remember with a smile until your brain turns to mush and you don't even remember how to control your bowels. When you wait in line for Playstation 3, you get a chance to have $600 bucks disappear from your pocket, for a product you'll be able to get by just walking into a store in two weeks.
The horrible truth is Sony Corp., through commercials, bought magazine articles, paid for blogs and rampant hype has suckered these people into believing that they will be special if they are among the first to buy this product.These two young ladies have been sleeping in a
I know that Colnago only makes 50 units a year of certain models of their bikes, and I have Colnago lust bad. You won't find me playing homeless to get one. The point being, this is degrading. No company should treat their customers this way, or encoyrage to act this way and live an inhuman existence. This isn't like the guys dresses up as Chewbacca and Obi-Wan; they all have huge smiles on their faces. The Playstation line dweller all seem miserable, and there isn't a smile to be found. Except this guy with arms raised and fingers out thrist. Him and his mother were certain they would be victorious. They just seemed really stoned to me. His mother kept trailing behind me the whole time I was snapping photos asking me how much she could sell her PS3 on Ebay for. In a few of the pictures, you'll notice a woman with a blanket over her head. She told me she had to cover her face, because she told her boss she was extremely ill, and couldn't come to work for a week. So she could wait in this line in front of Circuit City. She was worried her boss might see her in a picture and she would get busted.
These folks jumped onto a nearby wireless network and were sending regular updates to a PS3 forum, as well as checking out the current PS3 auctions on Ebay. If you didn't know that these people were waiting for a PS3, you would probably think that a shanty town had sprung up in Bay Ridge. It certainly smelled like one had. Everyone was in pretty bad humor, and they still had another two days to go.
I think the part that bothered me the most, was a conversation I heard two Circuit City employees having, around the far side of the building, away from where the queue was. They were joking with each other that there were originally 20 PS3's for sale, but the manager and employees had grabbed 10 for themselves and there friends. The manager told them that if people waiting asked how many PS3's they had, to say enough for everybody. The huge line outside was great publicity for the store and for the PS3 launch. These are just my random thoughts I want I think is a really bizarre, but very sad situation. I originally thought I would have a grand old time posting these pics and tearing these people apart. Now, I find that while I'm glad I took these photos to document an interesting phenomenon, that phenomenon is ultimately a sad one, that shows off very well the horrid levels to which modern society can drag its' people down.
There are certain books that I find myself going back to again and again, year after year. In a few cases, I have actually read these books to the point of disintegration.
Rembrandt's Eyes. The Third Policeman. Brian Wilson's bizzare but ultimately depressing autobiopic Wouldn't it Be Nice? Year after year, I find myself spending a huge chunk of my time walking around with the physically daunting guide to New York City's Architecture, the Fourth and sadly final edition of The AIA Guide to New York City, by the architect's architect's Norval White and Elliot Willensky. There is certainly no shortage of guidebooks to New York City, but most guidebooks just hit the major architectural highlights: The Empire State Building, The Woolworth Building and the Flatiron. Very few books even bother to acknowledge that there are other boroughs, never mind thatI decided to take advantage of the creepily warm weather the past few days, and see what White and Willensky had to say about my new adaopted Brooklyn neighborhood, home of disco, guidos, goombahs and the ever looming bridge, Bay Ridge.
My tour began with a stroll down 72nd Street, and while searching for a certain old church, I stumbled onto a gorgeous remake of a Federal style house. Bay Ridge
There's some nice stonework over the portico of this church on 72nd street. Maybe I'm a sucker who grew up in an Italian neighborhood in New Jersey, but I have a
soft spot for tacky lawn ornamentation, especially wishing wells. You won't see one of these in Manhattan.
(DSC0036) The Bay Ridge United Methodist Church, built in 1885 snagged my eye because of the nice opposition of green ashlar with real brownstone trim. One thing I've learned hawking out building over the years, is real brownstone is pretty real in NYC. Real brownstone was absurdly expensive, even a hundred years ago, and it's a soft stone. It doesn't last. The weather chisels it down mighty fast, so quite a bit of what appears to brownstone isn't. This is the real deal.
There was a time when people cared about learning, and knowledge was a valuable commodity. I'm not talking MP3 copyright's either. Gears for the engineers? Harps for the musicians? Lamps of knowledge? Stylised swirling atoms? On the front of the Bay Ridge Branch of The New York Public Libraryis this beautiful cast iron homage to learning. The rest of the building is a somewhat hideous mid 60's take on modernism that doesn't deserve a picture, but here is something unique and beautiful. I'm no hater of the modern world by any means, but these symbols here bring me back to a time when people cared deeply about learning, beyond the monetary rewards it can bring a person. C'mon, there's a harp, for g-d's sake. I hear the newest brand of the NYPL will have dollar signs and a stylized M-16 carved into the window arches.
As I was snapping these photos, I noticed a large apartment complex was on fire down the bloc. Then I noticed the Eyewitness News van, and I thought to myself, 'Wow, they must be psychic or have set the fire themselves, because they beat the NYFD here!'. On the other side of the news van, I saw Miss Sexy News Reporter, who looked at me, a bit puzzled and said 'What the hell is going on here? Is that building on fire?'. They do an amazing job teaching the powers of observation at those journalism schools, eh?
It's probably something I picked up during my years living in SoHoin Manhattan, but I
am enamored with NYC's cobblestone streets. It's a great suprise to walk down some block and find these leftovers from New York's gaslight days. Most of the cobblestone streets have been paved over by now, but here and there you'll get a chance to play Victorian New Yorker. This is a quiet little block just off 3rd Avenue. Those are my limited edition Nike Pele kicks
Here's a gaudy but intricate tile mural, across the street from the Bay Ridge Masonic Temple. Completed in 1890, this building was originally the home of the Exempt Fireman's Association. Exempt from what, we can only wonder.No longer a Masonic Temple, or home to the
mysteriously exempt fireman, if you look closely at DSC0070, you can see the buildings Masonic heritage below the sign for the current owners, the New Hope
Fellowship. This building wears its' past proudly. In
addition to the faded Masonic signage, the seals of the
old volunteer fire company are clearly visible above
the entranceway on the cornice, over the windows and
on the keystones. There are some Masonic symbols in the
stained glass windows as well. If you have sharp eyes
you'll pick out the name 'Blythebourne', which was an
earlier incarnation of the Bay Ridge neighborhood.
lesson' above ground. That's an astute observation. Studying this building gives you an idea of how many different uses a building in Brooklyn serves over its' lifetime. Here's a closeup
of the entranceway to help you pick up on all
this history.
The Flagg Court Apartments, buildt between 1933 and 1936 (Ernest Flagg, architect)are a stunning piece of efficient apartment design in the midst of the mostly single family homes in these parts. Ernest Flagg, who also designed the Singer Building and Scribner Building (one of my personal favorites) in Manhattan, really had his brain working overtime when he put this complex up. At the time it was built, it featured reversible exhaust fans, and outside shutters to regulate the temparature inside. Not a big deal now, but at the time this quite innovative. Additionally, Flagg Court was one of the first buildings to use finished concrete floors that double as the ceiling for the floor below. That's efficient architecture. Although locked, the courtyard with it's pseudo-Palladian temple and fantastic landscaping is quiet and beautiful. Compared to the average concrete monstrosities that pass as building courtyards in the rest of the cities, this is a hidden gem.
The next few photos are from 76th street, and if you're a New Yorker, they may blow a hole out of the back of your mind they did mine. I am absolutely stunned that these homes, and this street is in Brooklyn. 76th Street is also a step street, and it is filled with brilliantly executed mansions. Real, honest to goodness mansions that would be more at home in Great Britain than Great Brooklyn.
Also on the same block, although somewhat obscured by trees and foliage, but no less grogeous, is a Neo-Georgian stunner on a massive plot of land (massive for Brooklyn at least). The columned porch is something you don't see here everyday, and the side
of the house, which faces the street is just as impressive. My wife said it looks as if the Whitehouse dropped out of the sky and landed in Bay Ridge, and I think she's right. This house was built somewhat
earlier than its' neighbors, being completed in 1865. I imagine at the time it was finished this part of Brooklyn was still bucolic farmland. Little did the owners know that an entire neighborhood would grow up round this neo-Georgian masterpiece.
This cannon is at the end of the mansion block, and it a somewhat fittingly stately
piece of lawn kitsch. You can't put a pink flamingo on the lawn of a mansion, can you? You might in Brooklyn actually.
One of my favorite designers is Carroll Shelby, and while I prefer his older Mustangs, this newer Cobra is still a tough rolling work of art. I was pretty amazed that I was fast enough on the draw with my Nikon to catch this guy tearing down the block.
The detailed trim and bright, but non-garish colors make this home stand out. as you walk away from the mansions, towards the water, the homes shrink, but not by much. As they get smaller, the take a significant decline in architectural taste. The truth is, they start to get gaudy and ugky fast. This little charmer is a noted exception.
DSC0171, finished in 1892 is set apart from its'neighbors by its' massive tower. Although it doesn't face the street, the entrance is through the octagonal tower on the southern edge of the home. This is officially a landmark home, but its' not really to my taste.It may be because it has been refinished with ugly cheap looking brick and bad landscaping.
You can get a better look at the tower in the second photo below (DSC0175) and see what I mean about the poor choice of finishing materials. Money can't buy taste. This would be a wonderful looking home if it were finished with more appropriate materials that fit the style of the home.
Just as I finished picking my jaw up off the street after viewing the 76th Street Mansions, I turn the corner and find myself at Hogwart's. While I was taking pictures earlier in the day, I ended up chatting with a cool guy and his dog who were from the neighborhood. I told him I was an architecture student, taking shots of good looking houses, and he said, 'You have to see the Witch's House, a few blocks over.It's great!' Buddy, you couldn't be more right! This is truly a unique home, and a terrific example of Arts and Crafts architecture. Locally known as 'The Witch's House', or 'The Gingerbread House', it's officially known as the Howard E. and Jessie Jones House. Designed by J. Sarsfield Kennedy, architect, and completed in 1917, this is one of the most unique buildings in New York City. From the curving shingled roof, to the rough cut stone,matching stone wall and lush landscaping, this is a winner.
must be petrified to knock on the door for trick or treating. The wall and gates are cut from the same irregular stones that the home is made from, a hallmark of a real Arts and Crafts style construction. The elegant curves of the roof
and narrowing chimney all
add to the Hansel and Gretel effect. I was certain that as I shot photos I would be offered candy by an old crone. Although, I'm all skin and bones, so I'd probably have to spend a while eating in a cage before I made any kind of decent meal. This house is worth a trip to Bay Ridge in its' own right. Again, 'I can't believe I'm in New York City'. This is approximately 2 miles from downtown Manhattan.
Fort Hamilton high school is a nice looking building for a newer NYC Public School. It has impressive sports fields in the back, and a pretty sweet bell tower. As I was lining up these shots, I noticed an older woman and her husband, also lining up the same photos as myself. She approached me and said, 'I was in the first four year graduating class from this high school'. She was still alive and kicking hard. Right on sister.
Bay Ridge has a wonderful shoreline park along its' entire length.I often go on about Owl's Head skate park, one of my favorite BMX spots in the city, but there is a lot to be said for a quiet, beautiful green spot to just hang out and read. There is also some nice rusty wrought iron. They don't make these dangerous fences anymore, too bad. There's always some dumb Darwin Award kid getting impaled on them.
Facing the water, with have this overgrown Mission style home, shadowed by a hideous hospital building. This home is traeding the thin line between pertfectly overgrown and eyesore. For now it's definetly on the right side of the line.It would also make a great Brooklyn outpost of El Sombrero, although I heard that they don't have the deadly frozen margarita's to go because of trouble with out of town frat boys. Damn. Another amazing NYC tradition ruined by drunken outsiders.
Bay Ridge is chock o' block full of bike lanes. I'm a proud member of Transportation Alternatives, who do a great job of getting bike lanes all over the place. Even in way out there family Brooklyn.
This is the chapel of Visitation Academy, completed in 1913. You can't see it in the picture, but there is an enormous block spanning cement wall to protect the Catholic Virgins from bad Catholic boys like me. This Neo-Renaissance pile is a welcome surprise, as it just pops out of nowhere on a residential block.
Bay Ridge is proud, with good reason of its' bridge. Its' also proud of its' diners, of which there many. Here we have a nice confluence of both. This is a fantastic sign, both the stationary and spinning one. The interior lives up to the signage, being a classic 80's diner remodeling job.
After my walking tour with White and Willensky, I walked off into the sunset. Not really. I wandered home to my apartment and cooked veggie chick patties and drank Bud pounders.