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Showing posts with label Queens NY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Queens NY. Show all posts

3/16/11

Queens Plaza Untamed


I guess it's obvious I think Queens Plaza is one of the most photogenic places on earth.  Too bad the city's "improving" it with rock gardens and bike lanes for the plastic condo class; hopefully it's just too nasty to tame.

Above, at Northern Blvd.  Below, on the Queensboro Plaza platform looking west.

1/28/11

Signs of Snow


In Queens again.  Above, a fresh snow carpet matches the whitewashed sign at the oil facility on the Queens side of the Greenpoint Ave. bridge.  Below left, the CitiBank Queens tower looms in the distance past the LIRR tracks near 50th Ave.


Meanwhile, above right and below, from 51st Ave. near 21st St., traffic climbs the LIE from the Midtown Tunnel under a mountain of signs.

1/20/11

Queens Scenes

A few of my favorites.  Above, 43rd Ave. off Crescent St. in Long Island City.

Thomson Ave. at Dutchkills St. over the LIRR tracks.

Madison Square towers in the distance, from 49th Ave. near 33rd St.

9/9/10

Queens Clutter


Slightly dated photos of Queens I like a lot.  Above, from Greenpoint Ave. where it passes over the LIE.


Above, on Van Dam just west of the LIE.


Not so cluttered above, on Thomson Ave. over the LIRR tracks, looking toward Queens Plaza.  "Gotham Center," on the right, is just about glassed-in now.

7/7/10

Pink & Green in Queens


Even though I know the real BP is still living fat as a Colombian drug lord, the vision of a broke-ass BP, above and left, living like a troll under the tracks coming out of Queens Plaza, makes me feel better.

And after experiencing NYC as Target Train Toy Town, the way the photo to the left suggests a circular Queens Plaza train set makes me feel better too.

Meanwhile on the other side of the LIRR tracks on Skillman, below, an unusual juxtaposition of vehicles on the left, and an Acela locomotive on the right.  (I had no idea the Acela ran on these tracks; is the locomotive being punished for going too slow?)

7/5/10

4th of July Toy Town NYC

Not a creature was stirring... well, maybe a mouse.

It was nice and empty out in Queens on the 4th of July.  Quiet, inviting spots under shade trees (below left); limp, tattered real flags (below right) that remind us why zero-maintenance bumper sticker flags were invented; and the LIRR commuter train tracks stretching into the overheated distance (above), so still and empty I could hear a worn part tick every so often, like an insect in rising desert heat.


Meanwhile, back in town, the Target Train (formerly the 6 Train, below) brought me back to reality and the real NYC -- once labeled Satan's Workshop, now become Santa's Toy Town -- where public space and infrastructure is sponsored by the highest bidder, those wonderful corporations that furnish what we share...

...with "street furniture" ad platforms that show us how to decorate our emptiness and keep ourselves occupied as the clock ticks down, as our supposedly sacred freedom seeps through our fingers because we can't decide how to spend it, because choosing one thing shuts out all the others.

We let con men sell us one self-serving Theme after another to fill the void, and it was only a matter of time before their sponsors became our sponsors.


And here we are, living in their Theme Park surrounded by ads for things that feed our insatiability and rob us of contentment, that lure and agitate us with pointless noise and movement, until we really believe freedom is the ability to update Facebook while lounging at the park, surrounded by thousands of shiny plastic reflections of ourselves doing the same thing.

Wasting our freedom on baubles, signing our world over to the highest bidder, so sold-out that -- like a small dog whose owner dresses it in a tiny sailor suit -- we don't even notice we've turned into clowns, into Barbie & Ken dolls riding toy trains, the playthings of sponsors whose only interest is keeping us hypnotized and nursing at their machines until they've sucked us dry.

They got rid of graffiti on trains so this could happen!

6/1/10

GOP BP Arson Party

BP Station Spills Green All Over E. Williamsburg

"The images from the last month -- Washington essentially powerless, BP flailing away -- has been deeply disheartening." [ NYT ]

Yes, but at least the FOX GOP Tea Party has finally found a role for government it can endorse: janitor.  From GOP Gov. Bobby Jindal: "We need our federal government exactly for this kind of crisis."  For the GOP, the role of government (and taxpayer money) is to clean up after the filthy rich and corporations that pollute their way to profit.

Meanwhile, in Currently in Vogue: Ringing the Deficit Alarm, Democratic Rep. Neal says of Republicans complaining about the deficit: "The people who set the fire are now the ones calling the fire department."  It warms my heart to hear a Democrat speak truth like that.  But it saddens me to agree with Frank Rich that Obama is still sadly lacking when it comes to getting his modest program across.

I know it's tough to compete with the lynch mob excitement the GOP sells, but if I was Obama and they tried to turn me into a janitor I'd either curse them out sideways to Sunday or do what former Gov. "Drill Baby Drill" Palin did: Quit!

Sign Over Big Hole Where BP Was at Queens Plaza

5/13/10

Wired LIRR Queens


Looking north toward Queens Plaza across the LIRR tracks in March.  Feeding the shiny streamliner above and the locomotive at the bottom, the mass of wires in between.  Note the 7 Train descending toward the Plaza, below right.


3/23/10

The Crookedness of Queens


I'm not sure why, but the photos here -- looking toward Queens Plaza from the bridge over the LIRR to the south -- look crooked no matter what I do to straighten them out.  Above and left, to the northeast.

Below (closeup left), on the southwest side, what looks like "Cleaning Time" worn off around a missing clock on a building in front of Citicorp.


And below, the always hectic sight of traffic hurtling through the Plaza beneath the MTA tracks.

2/12/10

Bloomberg Times Square Antidote


Now that Bloomberg has declared his patio lounge Times Square a success...


Where TV viewers and tourists can sit and inhale their transfat-free 3000 calorie Happy Meal without inhaling tailpipe exhaust, and revel in the reflected, throbbing emptiness of that shiny corporate ad mall, that Romance Novel Vampire Circle Jerk House of Mirrors, where the flagships of all the corporations that own culture are lined up and waiting to ferry us out to sea, where they'll prime us with free cocktails and slot machines quarters, wait till we're drunk and hypnotized, then roll us for every last cent of our cash, identity and dreams before they dump us -- over the New Jersey Trench, full of soggy styrofoam, dirty needles and axle grease -- then turn around and head back to Bloomberg Times Square for a fresh load of suckers...


...the antidote: some pictures from Queens Plaza at Northern Blvd.

1/13/10

Citicorp Queens


From a few different angles on a cold day, the Citicorp Building, aka One Court Square, aka the tether-ball pole of Long Island City, aka the Queens echo of Citigroup Center straight across the East River in Manhattan.

I know it's shocking to think that bankers could be arrogant, but isn't the arrangement of the towers -- the way they form a "Citigroup Gate" that straddles the East River like a latter day Colossus of Rhodes -- a bit grand?

The photo above is from the Greenpoint Ave. Bridge.  The one below left is from right down the street; the base of the building borders the left side of the photo, making its Manhattan cousin look puny in the gap to its right.


Then above right and below, two examples of one of my favorite types of photos, where a cloud puts the subject in the dark on a sunny day.  I like the way the steam from the power plant fizzles out near the top of the darkened tower below.

The photo below is from the Greenpoint Ave. Bridge.  The one above right is from 30th St. near 47th Ave.; the other tower in the photo belongs to a storage facility, and is no doubt painted red, white & blue because, to the owners, America Means A Place to Store Your Stuff!

12/17/09

Around Queens Plaza


The saving grace of Queens Plaza is its crusty pink spine, which is likely too expensive to replace, so all the banners, benches and condo glass in the world won't be able to yuppify it.

Above and to the left, at least during construction, the Batman Building, aka Gotham Center, fits right in.


Meanwhile at the other end of Queens Plaza, past the NYPD cruiser keeping an eye on the Scandals strip club above right, a graffitist tells us "cash smells" (or offers cash 4 smells?), below left.  Then below right -- trying to minimize the odor of money spent -- the new budget hotels share the same design, no matter what the brand.

If this insults your refined architectural taste, just remember that if the hotels were forced to come up with a brand new design every time they put up a pile of bricks -- that's strong enough to withstand 10 floors worth of sturdy maids stomping down halls and overweight tourists bouncing on beds -- they would have to move the hotel another quarter mile out from the plaza, and the drunken 4 AM walk back from Scandals would be twice as long.


[ Queens Plaza Playaz Club ]