Vikram Chatwal opens Stay Hotel with rooms from $249

Sarah Palin photo booth features dead caribou

U.N. Delegates' Dining Room food fests: Iceland, China

Yankee Stadium tours resume; Shea demolition begins

Oh snap, 'Legally Blonde' closing Oct. 19 on Broadway

Spa Week returns with $50 treatments October 13-19

Amy at newyorkology.com





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OpenHouse NY 2008 no-reservations required picklist

The sixth annual OpenHouse New York event takes place this weekend, opening up 200 or so sites for free access, including many that are not open to the public any other time.

oldcemetery.JPGThe bad news is that the most exclusive locations — the abandoned High Line railroad line and the Woolworth Building — have already maxed-out on their reservations.

However, many of the spots require no reservation at all. NewYorkology has pulled together a list of some of the sites offering the most interesting access this weekend. Granted, there are a lot of other good locations on the list that are always open to the public (the Chrysler Building’s lobby, for example) but this list emphasizes the seldom-open spots.

Be mindful that the printed guide to OHNY is only partly accurate; there have been cancellations and additions as well as time and location changes. Updates can be found in a number of places, including the OHNY website’s program and site update pages. OHNY has also started tweeting site updates on Twitter; and NewYorkology has been tweeting updates as well. (If you use Twitter, please tag updates with #OHNY if you find sites with unexpectedly long lines, or closed, which unfortunately happens.)

The picklist:

Sites open both Saturday and Sunday
cannonhouse.JPGGovernors Island will open some of the homes in the historic district that have never before been open to the public Ferry’s from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m; note that the ferry schedule changed this week.

Seldom-open New York City Marble Cemetery is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. all weekend.

Washington Irving High School on Irving Place opens both days from noon to 3 p.m. showcasing its land-marked murals and Gothic-inspired public spaces.

Historic Richmond Town on Staten Island opens some of its oldest, rarely open, unrestored homes and farmhouses both days from 1 to 5 p.m.

Two-hour harbor tours on the 101-year-old tugboat Pegasus departing at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m.

Site-specific BREAKING GROUND – A Dance Charrette staged in Hangar B of the city’s original municipal airport, Floyd Bennett Field at 12:30 and 2:30 p.m.

Site-specific, family-friendly performance of The Crane Wife on Pier 66 (on the Hudson at W. 26th) at 1 and 3 p.m.

3,000-square foot Broadway Penthouse at Great Jones opens from 9 a.m. to noon and 2 to 5 p.m.- UPDATE: SITE CANCELED

Queens Theatre in the Park is offering behind the scenes tours of its recent renovation from noon to 8 p.m. on Saturday and noon to 5 p.m. on Sunday

Glass blowing demonstrations at Pier Glass Art Studio in a Civil War-era warehouse in Red Hook, with talks by the artists both days at 11 a.m., 1 p.m. and 3 p.m.

Saturday-only list
The neo-Renaissance Prince George Ballroom (at 15 E. 27th St at 5th Ave.,) will be open from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Quirky remodel of the Kushner Residence which includes salvaged subway doors, open in Greenwich Village from 11:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

St. Paul’s Church in the Bronx will offer tower tours up its 225-year-old wooden staircase from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.

The neo-Georgian style Caroline Ladd Pratt House and other Pratt buildings will be open for tours a t 1, 2 and 3 p.m.

At 2 p.m. the Episcopal Actors’ Guild presents “The Devil and Daniel Webster” at the Neo-Gothic Church of the Transfiguration, at 1 E. 29th St. at 5th Ave.

Angels & Accordions,” a site-specific dance will be performed at Green-Wood cemetery at noon and 3:30 p.m.

Thirteen/ WNET studio tours every half hour from 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.

mossmanlocks.JPGTheJohn M. Mossman Lock Collection (normally $10 entrance fee) will open for free as part of the The General Society of Mechanics and Tradesmen in Midtown from 9 to 5 p.m.

Fantasize about the roof deck you always wanted at the anderson architects West Chelsea studio with views of the Hudson and other rooftops from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

School of the Future: Green Roof & Garden opens from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.

The Arsenal in Central Park is open from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. for tours of the roof decks and WPA-era murals, but the Parks Dept. suggests guests “sign in early, there’s a 30-person maximum per tour.”

Sunday-only list
Westbeth, the “largest artists community in the world” at 155 Bank Street in the West Village will open for tours from 2 to 4 p.m.

Park Slope’s Montauk Club, inspired by a Venetian Gothic palace, opens from 1:30 to 5 p.m.

Related: Bowery Boys’ Top 10 OHNy sites
Forgotten NY’s coverage of OHNY 2007, Part II

Picture credits: NYC Marble Cemetery, Governors Island, Mossman Lock Collection, all by Amy Langfield/NewYorkology

October 3, 2008 12:52 PM Comments (0)

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Brooklyn Navy Yard bus tours to start monthly schedule

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Starting this weekend, the historic Brooklyn Navy Yard will open up once a month for public tours, allowing visitors to get a glimpse at spots including the still-in-use dry dock where the ironclad USS Monitor was outfitted for the Civil War.

Founded in 1801, the Brooklyn Navy Yard still works on ships, but also houses a 300-acre industrial park, Steiner movie studios, and soon, the Brooklyn Navy Yard Historical Center. Active during WWI and WWI, it’s where the USS Connecticut, USS Arizona, and USS Missouri were launched. It’s also the spot from where the first song was broadcast over wireless radio. In 1907, opera singer Eugenia Farrar sang “I Love You Truly” from the USS Dolphin docked at the Brooklyn Navy Yard.

The bus tours will be offered the first Sunday of every month, staffed on alternate turns by the Brooklyn Historical Society and the Center for the Urban Environment.

This weekend’s tours will be offered as part of OpenHouse New York. And although they’re free, all the reservations have already filled up. (However, no reservations are needed to attend this Saturday’s Brooklyn Navy Yard Arts Open Studio from non to 6 p.m.)

The CUE tour on November 2, from 1 to 2:30 p.m., is priced at $30 and will be led by Adam Schwartz. Advance registration is required. (718) 788-8500, ext. 217.

The December 7 tour, led by the Brooklyn Historical Society, is the same price. It departs at 1:30 p.m. Reservations required: (718) 222-4111 ext. 250

Earlier: Down in Brooklyn’s Dry Dock No. 1 with Mary Whalen
Brooklyn Navy Yard helps launch ‘Graving Dock’

October 2, 2008 2:12 PM Comments (0)

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Transit Museum tours, bus fest, Metro North open house

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The Transit Museum has a slew of interesting tours on offer for this fall and winter, but they’re so popular that the entire season’s offerings have sold out, except for one.

The only tour still on sale is the December 14 visit to the city’s abandoned, 1904 chandeliered, Guastavino-tiled Old City Hall subway station, (pictured, top.)

busfest.JPGHowever, a couple of entirely free events are also on tap.

This Sunday, there’s free admission to the Transit Museum in Brooklyn, and the (also free) 15th Annual Bus Festival will be set up at the big Atlantic Antic street fair, showcasing vintage buses from the city’s retired fleet.

Also free, Metro-North will host a free one-day open house at Harmon Shop, its largest maintenance and repair facility. Visitors can get up close to the fleet of locomotives and work equipment and meet the railroaders who keep the trains running.

The open house is scheduled for October 11 (changed from the original date on October 18.)

harmonnotext.jpgTo get to the open house, you’ll need to buy a ticket on the Metro-North’s Hudson Line to Croton-Harmon Station, where you can catch a free shuttle bus to and from the shop.

As for those sold-out Transit Museum tours, the last available one is only open to people with Transit Museum membership ($40 for the friend level.) Joining also gets you first dibs at next season’s transit tours before they’re announced to the general public.

“Many of the New York Transit Museum Shop and Behind-the-Scenes tours have space limitations and often sell out quickly because Museum Members get advance notice,” Roxanne Robertson, New York Transit Museum Director of Special Projects, told NewYorkology via e-mail.

Picture source: Old City Hall station skylight, and 2006 Bus Festival by Amy Langfield/NewYorkology. Harmon Shop image provided by MTA.

Earlier: OpenHouse NY official site list, with reservation picks
Free weekly walking tours in New York City
Bellydancing, buses and beers at Atlantic Antic

September 29, 2008 2:38 PM Comments (0)

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High Line tour lottery deadline at 4 p.m. for Open House

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If you’re hoping to get one of the 700 in-demand spots for the free tours of the undeveloped section of the High Line during Open House New York, you must register online before 4 p.m. today.

The tours will take place October 4 and 5 during Open House NY.

Another section of the High Line — an abandoned, elevated freight train track built on the West Side of Manhattan in the 1920s and ’30s — will soon open as a public park.

The OHNY lottery system was put in place following the huge demand for last year’s tours.

“Last year’s tours (for which we had 700 slots) filled up on our online registration program in 5 minutes, and we had an additional 5,000 inquiries about them,” a High Line spokeswoman told NewYorkology earlier this month when the first 2008 OHNY sites were announced.

Many of the best OHNY tours have already filled to capacity, but a lot of the 200 sites and programs will be available for walk-ups as well. However, this year’s list appears to have more reservation requirements than in past years.

ohnyhospitaltour2006.JPG

Among the sites with openings, is Ellis Island’s shuttered South Side buildings. Of the tours scheduled both Saturday and Sunday at 9:30, 11 a.m., 12:30, 2 and 3:30 p.m., only two on Sunday are so far full: the 9:30 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. ones. To reserve, call (212) 363-3200, extension 580. (Tuesday update: All the Ellis tours are now full, a Save Ellis Island representative told NewYorkology.)

Picture credit: OHNY 2007 High Line tour and OHNY 2006 Ellis Island abandoned hospital surgery room. Amy Langfield/NewYorkology

September 29, 2008 10:07 AM Comments (0)

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OpenHouse NY official site list, with reservation picks

ohny2008coverlogo.jpg(This entry will be updated for a few days as NewYorkology can obtain clarifications to the OHNY guide. See the list of best spots that don’t require reservations.)

The full list of the free Open House NY events for October 4 and 5 is now live, and a significant number of the events will require reservations this year.

Among the free events one of the the coolest additions this year may be Governors Island, which for the first time ever will open up the entire island to the public. (Reservations are required for the all-island tram tour: info-gipec@empire.state.ny.us; but “walking tours with special access to several buildings are not reservation based,” an OHNY spokeswoman told NewYorkology via e-mail on Friday morning. But a Governors Island rep e-mails: “The entire historic district is open to the public, including buildings that are normally closed. The only way to access the southern part of the Island is with a tram reservation.” )

There are about 200 sites and programs scattered all over the five boroughs. Novices be warned, many of these sites are open other times during the year. If you’re trying to maximize your weekend, look for the private residences and the unique opendialogue programs, often with the architects who designed or reconstructed the spaces.

Also be warned that many sites will change their offerings and hours if the past years are any indication. Indeed, tonight’s list already has cancellations (McCarren Park Pool,) and several additions.

But most importantly for now is the snagging of the reservations. … (Items in bold may still have openings.)

Reservations required

woolworthgargoyle.jpg Woolworth Building tour of the lobby and a 21st floor office - Saturday only; e-mail openhouse@controlgroup.com - FULL
The High Line - tours both days awarded by lottery. You can register online for the High Line lottery until September 29 (corrected date.) Details from High Line email: The tours are “30-minute walks on the High Line’s northern section, which still exists its wild, self-seeded state. Please note, tours will not enter any of the areas of the High Line currently under construction.”
Great Interiors of the Financial District walking tour including the Collector’s Office at the former U.S. Custom House, the great hall at the former Cunard Building at 25 Broadway, and the huge rotunda of the former Merchant’s Exchange at 55 Wall St. - Sunday at 2 p.m. FinancialDistrictInteriors@gmail.com - FULL
Guggenheim Museum dialogue with restoration project manager and museum staff - Saturday at 2 p.m. - FULL
Ellis Island’s shuttered South Side buildings - 9:30, 11 a.m., 12:30, 2 and 3:30 p.m. both days, (212) 363-3200 × 580 - FULL
Radio City Music Hall tour with restoration architect Hugh Hardy at 1, 2:30 and 4 p.m. both Saturday and Sunday ohny@h3hc.com - FULL
7 World Trade Center dialogue with the architects Skidmore, Owings and Merrill with Silverstein Properties - Saturday at 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. - FULL
Grand Central Terminal dialogue/tour with renovation architects on Saturday at 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. ohny@bbbarch.com - FULL
BBG-BBGM Design Studios on the 25th floor of the Empire State Building - several tours both Saturday and Sunday
Trolley tour of 1939 and 1964 World’s Fair monuments - Saturday at 10, 11 a.m., noon and 1 p.m. (718) 846-2731 - FULL
Porter House condominium tour with SHoP architect Gregg Pasquarelli - Saturday at 6 p.m. - FULL
Morgan Library & Museum - Sunday noon and 2 p.m. dialogue with with BBB architect Meghan Lake - FULL
New Museum tours with former SANAA architect Florian Idenburg - Sunday at noon and 1 p.m. - FULL
NYC’s first airport, Floyd Bennett Field, will offer tours of the control tower and the passenger loading tunnel - Saturday and Sunday from 11a.m. to noon and 1 to 2 p.m., a ranger told NewYorkology on Friday afternoon.
Brooklyn Navy Yard by bus - Saturday and Sunday at 9 a.m. and 2 p.m. chidalgo@brooklynnavyyard.com - FULL
Temple Emanu-El dialogue with restoration architect Tom Lindberg of Beyer Blinder Belle - Sunday at noon and 2 p.m. ohny@bbbarch.com
Private tours of MoMA’s “Home Delivery: Fabricating the Modern Dwelling” - Saturday and Sunday at 9:30 a.m. - FULL
The BankNote tour with Nadia Shirazi of Beyer Blinder Belle Architects & Planners of this landmark building, which is being redeveloped as a center for creative industries - Saturday at 2 p.m. ohny@bbbarch.com.
Lefferts House attic-to-cellar tour - Saturday and Sunday at noon (normally $10)
Times Square: Peeling Back the Neon tour - Saturday at 11a.m., 4 p.m. and 11p.m.; Sunday at 11 a.m. and 6 p.m. (variation of the weekly free Friday tour, but the 11 p.m. tour will focus on “the sex scene, late night movies, and notable nightlife spots”)
Flux Factory’s Living Room site-specific installations in eight private homes and OHNY sites - Shuttle to all sites leaves at noon on Saturday and Sunday
Lower East Side Forsyth Street Loft tours with architects of an apartment blurs the boundaries between the public and private - Saturday and Sunday at 1:30, 3, 4:30 p.m. left@leftish.net - FULL
Transit power station tour with Robert Lobenstein, General Superintendent of New York City Transit - Saturday at 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. - FULL
Japan Society tours of its 1971 Junzo Yoshimura-designed building , the only building in NYC of modern Japanese design.- Saturday and Sunday at 12:30, 2 and 3:30 p.m. - FULL
Williamsburg Bridge Walk with former Chief Engineer/First Deputy Commissioner for NYC Department of Transportation “Gridlock” Sam Schwartz - Sunday at 1 p.m. - FULL
Woodlawn Cemetery tours of the mausoleums - both Saturday and Sunday from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. (718) 920-1470

There are still more sites that require reservations. See the OHNY list and look for sites marked with a scripted R.

No reservations required
The historic district of Governors Island - Saturday and Sunday
boehmhouse.jpgHistoric Richmond Town’s (pictured, left) restored 1720s farmhouse kitchen and a 1750s house - Saturday and Sunday 1 to 5 p.m.
1930’s-designed Jacob Riis Park, including grounds and renovated bathhouse - open Saturday from 9 to 5 p.m. with a no-reservations required tour 3 to 5 p.m., NPS rangers told NewYorkology late Friday. Also disregard the OHNY guide suggestion to take the Water Taxi; it no longer runs on weekends. Directions here.
Behind the scenes tours of the redesigned Queens Theatre in the Park (next to the Unisphere,) with its transparent, spiraling round pavilion - Saturday and Sunday
The Montauk Club - open Sunday from 1:30 to 5 p.m.

Read the rest of this entry

September 25, 2008 7:01 PM Comments (3)

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LaGuardia opens F-18, KC-135, helicopters for Kids Day

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NewYorkology contributor Vidiot commits journalism by night, edits Cocktailians and explores NYC by day. He’s especially interested in the infrastructure, transit, architectural wonders, drinking establishments, and hidden corners of the greatest city in the world.

(Update: A nasty weather forecast has canceled this event for 2008.)

Helicopters, passenger jets, antique and military aircraft will open for free this weekend at LaGuardia Airport as the Port Authority and the LaGuardia Airport Kiwanis Club present their annual “Kids Day.” (Adults are welcome too.)

The event is scheduled for Saturday from noon to 4 p.m.

lganypdtakeoff.jpgGet a close-up peek and tours of commercial and military aircraft: past participants have included the Geico Skytypers, NYPD and PAPD helicopters, passenger jets from Delta, American, and US Airways, a C-130 cargo plane operated by the NY Air National Guard on flights to Antarctica, airport fire trucks and emergency equipment, vintage aircraft, and more.

This year they’re slated to also have an F-18 fighter on site, and even a KC-135 tanker from McGuire AFB in New Jersey. (The arrival of the KC-135, based on the Boeing 707 airframe, will be extraordinarily rare: the last time a 707 airframe landed at LaGuardia was apparently in 1968, when RFK’s body was returned to New York.)

lgainsidethecockpit.jpg

Follow the signs to the Marine Air Terminal Ramp next to the Port Authority Police garage. Parking is available in Lot No. 7.

The bad news is that lousy weather may cancel the event, and there’s a storm on the way.Updates: (718) 397-0184.

All pictures by Vidiot, who has a full LaGuardia Kids Day 2007 picture set on Flickr.

September 25, 2008 12:07 PM Comments (0)

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Whoopi's the godmother of Circle Line's new boat

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Whoopi Goldberg is the proud godmother of Circle Line Sightseeing Cruises’ newest vessel, the Manhattan, which is the first of three new boats the iconic tour company is building for New York City in the next year.

whoopitalks.jpg“If you didn’t know that there was a big ocean out there, the Circle Line was what you had, and for me, for all of my youth, for all of my youth, the Circle Line meant that summertime was here. It meant that my mom would not have to sweat where she was going to take my brother and I because we knew that we were going on the boat. That was our boat. We saw people on television, people had yachts and things. We had the Circle Line. That was ours. That belonged to us, and other peple like us,” Goldberg said at Wednesday’s naming ceremony at Pier 81 on the East River. “This city is in my blood. Circle Line is in my blood.”

Watch the video of Goldberg talking about what Circle Line boats meant to her as a kid growing up in Manhattan (at 26th and 10th):



It’s the first time the 63-year old company has gotten a “new” vessel. Most of its fleet were built to transport U.S. troops to enemy beaches during World War II. The $5 million Manhattan, which is designed to look like the old boats on the outside, has several new features on the inside.

newcircleline.jpgFor one, it’s bigger: the new 165-foot boat can fit 600 people, the ceilings are a few inches higher and the boat itself is 34-feet wider. And while it’s slightly taller, it had to stay below the 24-foot clearance of the lowest bridge around Manhattan, the Broadway Bridge on the Harlem River.

The all-steel Manhattan has air conditioning, bigger windows, almost double the outside deck space, and a downstairs space entirely free of stanchions, which was a “real pain in the neck” to design, according to naval architect Andy Lebet. (See the DeJong and Lebet website for pictures of the Manhattan’s construction.)

The next new boats will be called the Brooklyn and the Queens. They’re expected to arrive in the spring.

circleline11.jpg

With the three new vessels coming into service, that means others will be retiring. The plan is to convert Circle Line VIII into a floating dock in 2009. Circle Line XI (pictured, above) will be retiring later this year, and the company is in talks to find a home for her - possibly at the Hudson Maritime Museum or as a Coast Guard training vessel.

circlelinecake.jpgIn her remarks at Wednesday’s ceremony, NYC City Council Speaker Christine Quinn noting that it’s only been in recent years that New York’s waterfront has been getting cleaned up with the addition of parks and public access. “For a long time, Circle Line was really the only thing on the river,” she said. ‘New York’s a river city and for a long time we turned our back on that. And Circle Line never did.”

The Manhattan next week will go into the regular rotation with the other vessels, so the only way to make sure you get on the new boat is to ask for that day’s schedule before buying your tickets.

Read the rest of this entry

September 18, 2008 9:54 AM Comments (0)

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Woolworth, High Line on OpenHouse NY list for 2008

openhouosewoolworthtour2007.jpg(Update: the full OHNY list is now available. Please see NewYorkology’s list of the reservation-required sites that are likely to max-out fast.)

The 6th Annual openhousenewyork Weekend — set for October 4 and 5 — this year will open nearly 200 sites to the public for free, plus almost 150 tours, talks, and workshops.

The partial list has just gone out via press release. It includes the Woolworth Building, the Stanford White-designed French Embassy, Shigeru Ban’s Metal Shutter Houses, a behind-the-scenes tour of Radio City Music Hall with architect Hugh Hardy, the High Line, the World Trade Center site, a Porter House tour with Shop architects and the Cherry Lane Theater renovations.

Also on the list: tours with the architects of the new Museum of Art and Design; a pre-renovation tour of the American Banknote Company Building in the Bronx; the addition to Queens Theatre in the Park originally designed by Philip Johnson for the 1964/1965 World’s Fair; the underground tunnels of the city’s first airport at Floyd Bennett Field; the John J. Harvey Fireboat; the site of the 1939 and 1964/1965 World’s Fairs; and the 2008 AIA/NY Design Award Winner Banchet Flowers event space.

Ellis Island’s shuttered South Side buildings and the recently renovated Ferry Building will also be open both days of OHNY weekend through reserved tours, possibly five tours per day, a Save Ellis Island spokesperson told NewYorkology.

The High Line tours will be be of the same area as last year, a spokesperson for Friends of the High Line told NewYorkology via e-mail today. The tours will cover the west side rail yards just south of the Javits Convention Center. This is the undeveloped portion of the elevated train tracks”still in its self-seeded state.”

highlineohny07.jpg

Like last year, the High Line tours will require hard-to-snag reservations: “Last year’s tours (for which we had 700 slots) filled up on our online registration program in 5 minutes, and we had an additional 5,000 inquiries about them. We’re anticipating another big rush this year, so we’re going to fill the tour slots up by lottery. Again, we’ll have 700 slots available. The lottery will open on the same day as the other OHNY tours.”

Read the rest of this entry

September 10, 2008 3:24 PM Comments (0)

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With 866 safety violations at U.N., school tours halted

ununsafe.jpgFollowing through on threats made last year, New York City officials have decided to halt all NYC school-group tours of the United Nations headquarters, which has at least 866 fire and building safety code violations, the Sun and Post report.

The U.N., located along the East River in Midtown Manhattan, is considered international territory and is exempt from New York City laws. However, city and U.S. officials have argued that if something goes awry there, New York City first-responders should be able to expect basic safety precautions.

Ahead of its big renovation project, the U.N. has already been scaling back its public tours. Earlier this year, it got rid of all weekend tours, and since August the Security Council chamber is excluded from all tours.

More from the Sun’s report:
U.N. officials say they have spent at least $3 million to comply with the city’s safety demands, funds they say will be wasted when the organization launches its $1.9 billion Capital Master Plan to overhaul the building by 2013.
Picture credit: Amy Langfield/NewYorkology
Earlier: U.N. Delegates’ Dining Room food fests: Iceland, China
Fire safety keeping Statue of Liberty’s top closed

September 10, 2008 1:10 PM Comments (0)

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Waterfall hours halved to reduce salt-watering of trees

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Olafur Eliasson’s large-scale East River public art project The New York City Waterfalls, will remain on through October 13, but they’ll soon stay dry for a large part of the day amid environmental concerns.

NY1 reports that as of September 8, the Waterfalls will be turned on only:
Monday - 5:30 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Tuesday - 12:30 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Wednesday - 5:30 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Thursday - 12:30 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Friday - 12:30 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Saturday - 12:30 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Sunday - 12:30 p.m. to 9 p.m.

Until then, the schedule will remain the same as it has from the official start on June 28: 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily except Tuesdays and Thursdays when they run from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m.

The Associated Press story does the math: The operating hours of the falls will drop to 50 hours a week from 101.

The Brooklyn Heights Association last week called for the the permanent shut down of the spigots at Labor Day because the installation was putting too much East River salt water in the air, which blows onto nearby trees at the River Cafe and Brooklyn Promenade.

The new hours are sure to lead to shake-ups in the schedules of the numerous ferry companies that have added extra service for the waterfalls cruises, including Circle Line downtown, NY Water Taxi and Circle Line 42.

Other Waterfalls-related news:

Brooklyn Bridge Park Conservancy has extended the lifespan of its pop-up park at Pier 1, just south of the Brooklyn Bridge on the Brooklyn side. More than 140,000 people have already visited the park this season since it opened June 26. It will remain open through September 28.

Free shuttle buses travel between the park and Brooklyn Borough Hall and High Street at Cadman Plaza West on Fridays (from 5 to 10:30 p.m.; and weekends from noon to 10:30 p.m.)

MoMA’s P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center has three other Eliasson installations on display through September 15. They were part of MoMA’s earlier “Take your time: Olafur Eliasson” exhibition.

Finally, watch a video clip taken atop one of the waterfalls.

Picture credit: Brooklyn Bridge waterfall in June. Amy Langfield/NewYorkology.

August 31, 2008 8:53 AM Comments (0)

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