Category Archives: my city and neighborhood

“New York’s Sidewalks Are So Packed, Pedestrians Are Taking to the Streets”

 

re:

“New York’s Sidewalks Are So Packed, Pedestrians Are Taking to the Streets,” by Winnie Hu,  The New York Times, June 30, 2016

Winnie Hu NY Times June 30 2016

 

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New York is indeed, as is stated in this article, a “world-class walking city.”

It’s kind of a fun article. The reporter, Winnie Hu — is there such a thing as a BAD reporter on the Times? – does a very good job.

But the supposed problem of overcrowded sidewalks in New York City is really not a problem, in my opinion — it’s a non issue.

I am always walking, practically everywhere, in the city, it seems (that’s admittedly hyperbole). I occasionally do step off the curb and walk in the street to avoid obstacles. Usually, it’s not pedestrians that are blocking the way. It could be cars or trucks illegally parked jutting out onto the sidewalk, or perhaps (often) a construction site.

Yes, certain areas are particularly crowded with pedestrians: Times Square; the Penn Station area; lower Manhattan (Broadway) in the vicinity of Houston Street and SoHo; Flushing, Queens.

But, most areas aren’t. Take Fifth Avenue, for example. It’s a major thoroughfare for locals and tourists alike with many shops and attractions and lots of pedestrians, but it’s almost always pleasant and not onerous to stroll on. This is also true of most of Broadway (with the exception of Times Square), particularly in the Upper West Side.

I walk everywhere and almost never experience pedestrian gridlock. Even on the most crowded streets.

The only such experience I’ve had in recent memory was a few months ago when the police roped off and shut down a stretch of 58th Street in Maspeth, Queens for a couple of days due to a criminal investigation. (There had a near abduction and robbery at a local business establishment.)

The traffic engineers should turn their attention elsewhere.

Some people love to fret, complain, and worry about any and all perceived inconveniences, but, believe me, the walkers can and will continue to do just fine.

 

— Roger W. Smith

   June 2016

New York Public Library

 

Below are photographs of the main research library, New York Public Library, Stephen A. Schwarzman Building, Fifth Avenue between 40th and 42nd Streets, New York, NY.

A wonderful place — to visit; to do research; to find books that are long out of print; to read and reflect; to restore one’s sanity.

There’s no other public library like it.

Attracts readers and visitors from everywhere, yet never feels crowded.

Open and welcoming to all. No fees or permissions required.

Knowledgeable staff ready and eager to serve you.

Incredible resources.

 

— posted by Roger W. Smith

 

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photographs by Roger W. Smith

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Pete's version, modified by Roger, of Aug 15 NYPL photo.jpg

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main reading room, NYPL 12-6-2018

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42nd Street in the rain

 

42nd Street, April 11, 2016.JPG

 

I took this photo in April 2016 on 42nd Street between Fifth and Sixth Avenues. Manhattan is a wonderful place.

The New York Public Library — a surprisingly uncrowded, peaceful facility that invites study and scholarship, that welcomes and affords pleasure to the user, and that is staffed by knowledgeable librarians ready to assist you — is to the left.

 

— posted by Roger W. Smith

    June 2016

Woodside, Queens, NY

 

 

street scene, Woodside, Queens, NY

Woodside, Queens, NY, May 2016; photograph by Roger W. Smith

 

— posted by Roger W. Smith

  May 2016

Manhattan in spring

 

MANHATTAN’S streets I saunter’d pondering

— Walt Whitman

 

photographs taken by Roger W. Smith

April 2016

 

Walking the Brooklyn Bridge

 

The Brooklyn Bridge, which spans the East River, was completed in 1883.  Since its opening, it has been a New York City landmark.

Walking over the Brooklyn Bridge and through Brooklyn is a great way for me to get home from Manhattan. Our neighborhood in Queens is very close to the Brooklyn border.

The Brooklyn Bridge has a boardwalk and is usually crowed with pedestrians and cyclists. Everyone seems to be in a good mood. Many people taking photos.

It’s a walk that gives me a high.

To get to the bridge, one has to walk downtown about two miles along Broadway. Then, another four miles or so from the bridge to our house. I like walking the pedestrian streets of Brooklyn. (By pedestrian here, I means the word in the sense of ordinary,  lacking excitement per se.) They are on a human scale.

 

— Roger W. Smith

  December 2016

 

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photographs (with one exception) by Roger W. Smith

 

walking the Brooklyn Bridge

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brooklyn-bridge

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entrance to Brooklyn Bridge walkwway.JPG

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See also my post

“Is the Brooklyn Bridge boardwalk too crowded?”

Is the Brooklyn Bridge boardwalk too crowded?

view of Sunnyside

 

This view of of Sunnyside, Queens, NYC from the No. 7 elevated train platform was taken by my son, Henry W. Smith.

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— posted by Roger W. Smith

   March 2016

my block

 

Maspeth, Queens, NY, April 2016

photograph by Roger W. Smith

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Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn

 

Eastern Parkway is located in  Brooklyn close to Prospect Park and the Brooklyn Public Library. This photo was taken in 2008 by Roger W. Smith.

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a beautiful church

 

I live in Queens, New York City adjacent to the Brooklyn border. I often walk through Brooklyn and over the Brooklyn Bridge on my way either to or from Manhattan.

Along my route on Flushing Avenue in Brooklyn, a long stretch, I pass All Saints Roman Catholic Church, which is located catty-corner to Flushing Avenue at 115 Throop Avenue.

I always stop to admire this church.

The parish was organized in 1866.  The current building was constructed in 1896. It’s in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn.

The church was established originally to serve working class German immigrants, many of whom worked in breweries in Williamsburg. Later, the neighborhood became largely Italian, as did the parish. Nowadays, the congregation is largely Hispanic.

Brooklyn is known as “the city of churches.”

 

— Roger W. Smith

   January 2016

 

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