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The Greenstreets program converts paved, vacant traffic islands, and medians into green spaces filled with trees, shrubs, and groundcover in an effort to capture stormwater.
The program is a part of the NYC Green Infrastructure Plan. All funding for Greenstreet construction under this plan is administered by the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP).
Part of the album Queens: Skillman Ave Greenstreets
(click to view the entire album)
About Green Infrastructure
Hard to believe how I'm going to turn 62 this August. Feel amazing. Been off both alcohol (2.5-years) and cigarettes (3-years), having quit both cold turkey. I was ready. I'm proud of myself for that
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Part of the album titled: Self-Portraiture
Click to view the full album
A fantasy-sized urn and fire hydrant invite New Yorkers to smile while celebrating Puerto Rican culture and summer in the city
When Roberto Lugo was a kid growing up in the gritty Kensington neighborhood of Philadelphia, summers were hot and dirty. Fortunately for Lugo, his father had a monkey wrench. The elder Lugo was that dad, the one who knew how to open a fire hydrant to cool things down and clean things up when the heat was on and the water was not.
Further info
Galerie: Roberto Lugo’s Giant Pottery Installation Brightens Madison Square Park
Roberto Lugo's website: www.robertolugostudio.com/
This photo is included in the album titled:
Manhattan: Madison Square Park
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Madison Square is a public square formed by the intersection of Fifth Avenue and Broadway at 23rd Street in the New York City borough of Manhattan. The square was named for Founding Father James Madison, the fourth president of the United States.
Address: 11 Madison Ave, New York, NY 10010
Size: 6.2-acre
madisonsquarepark.org/
Inside this van it was stockpiled with floor to ceiling crap
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Part of the album titled
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BEFORE & AFTER CONSTRUCTION
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Further info on 42-19 24th Street
Further info on 23-10 Queens Plaza South aka Opus Point
This is a dual album as these two major construction projects are situated just across 24th street @ Queens Plaza South from one another
Mackerel Sky. A rarity
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A mackerel sky is a term for clouds made up of rows of cirrocumulus or altocumulus clouds displaying an undulating, rippling pattern similar in appearance to fish scales;this is caused by high altitude atmospheric waves.
~ Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mackerel_sky
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Over the past year I have been taking this one same shot almost every weekday, mostly in the morning.
This photo is part of the overall album titled
Thomson Avenue, Long Island City
Part of the album titled:
Laminated glass artwork titled "Crystal Blue Persuasion" (2018) by Maureen McQuillan at 36 Ave N/W train station in Astoria, Queens.
More info available here:
new.mta.info/agency/arts-design/collection/crystal-blue-p...
MTA Arts & Design
new.mta.info/agency/arts-design
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Part of the album titled NYC Subway
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Part of a sub-album titled: Shoe Cameo
Click to view the images within
Note: Within the tags is the specific footwear being worn
Also part of the album:
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New York State Pavilion
Flushing Meadows–Corona Park in Queens, New York City
Structures built for World’s Fairs are usually built to be taken down. This happened with nearly every building from the 1939 World’s Fair, including the Trylon and Perisphere, and most of the buildings from the 1964 Fair. While many of the major pavilions were deconstructed (and sometimes shipped to other places), there are still remnants of the Fairs that exist today. These vestiges of the fairs have since become iconic landmarks of New York City such as the Parachute Jump in Coney Island, the Unisphere in Flushing Meadow-Corona Park in Queens, and the Queens Museum. Another World’s Fair remnant that it is hard to picture New York City without is the New York State Pavilion. Once the 1964-65 Fair wrapped, however, the future of the Pavilion was uncertain.
Further info:
"The Battle to Save the New York State Pavilion in Queens (untapped new york)
New York State Pavilion - Wikipedia
Queens, New York (Random)
Walking home from work
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Part of the album:
(click to view the entire album)
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This photo is part of the overall album titled
Queens: Honeywell Street Bridge (click to view that entire album)
This photo is part of the album titled
26-04 Jackson Avenue, Before-After Construction
(click to view that entire album)
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Renderings Reveal 13-Story Building At 26-04 Jackson Avenue In Long Island City, Queens
In the mid-1980's I had attended photography school in this red bricked corner mansion, which stands at 94th Street and Fifth Avenue, directly across from Central Park in New York City. Isn't that wild. From the early 1970's thru until the late 1990's, The International Center of Photography (ICP) had its founding location, museum and school situated in the Willard D. Straight house, a mansion built along NYC's famed museum mile
I had enrolled at ICP to study the art & science of black and white film photography
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Willard_D._Straight_House
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Part of the album titled
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Images available for purchase by commercial media outlets. Email stratton (dot) erica (at) gmail (dot) com for details.
Whilst walking home from my office this afternoon, I happened upon this fellow artist at work. I would never have seen this if I had taken the train
Part of the album:
(click to view the entire album)
Nothing yet with this one, though it's merely a matter of time now
Included in the album titled
32-44 Queens Blvd - Before/After Construction - Click to View
Part of the album titled:
38-15 Queens Boulevard / Before & After Construction
Click to view the full album
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Part of the album titled
(click to view the entire album)
Ramshackle
Included in the album titled
32-44 Queens Blvd - Before/After Construction - Click to View
UBB = Unending Building Boom
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Part of the album:
29-15 40th Road, LIC / Before & After Construction
(click to view the entire album)
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New Rendering Revealed For 29-15 40th Road in Long Island City, Queens
newyorkyimby.com/2024/04/new-rendering-revealed-for-29-15...
A new rendering has been revealed for 29-15 40th Road, an upcoming 12-story residential building in Long Island City, Queens. Few details have been made public about the project, which is being designed by Fogarty Finger Architects and developed by SB Development, which also acquired the adjacent lot at 29-13 40th Road for $8.7 million last fall.