Posts in Category: NEW YORK ON FOOT

439. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Times Square. Walking the five boroughs of New York City with a camera.

438. NEW YORK ON FOOT.

436. NEW YORK ON FOOT. It is still a working town, with an industrial pedigree.

435. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Midtown East.

434. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Manhattan.

433. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Midtown East.

431. NEW YORK ON FOOT. The East River Greenway.

430. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Chrysler Building in background.

424. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Brownsville, Brooklyn.

422. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Woodside, Queens.

421. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Midtown East. First Avenue and Forty-Second Street. UN building on the left, Long Island City in the background across the East River.

420. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Queens. 7 Train.

419. NEW YORK ON FOOT.

418. NEW YORK ON FOOT. East River.

417. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Midtown East. One measure of a place is its hidden gems.

415. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Brownsville, Brooklyn.

414. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Park Avenue steel.

409. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Midtown Manhattan is one of the great visual messes of the world.


406. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Manhattan.
East 44th Street between Lex and 3rd, looking toward Grand Central. Boxed in by the tall buildings, on a calm night these skyscraper “canyons” feel more indoors than out. Such nights often bring to mind the Fellini film “La Dolce Vita”, for which they built entire city blocks with traffic on a sound stage at the legendary Cinecittà Studio.

405. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Midtown East. The Plague Years.