75. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Lower East Side. Looking east on Delancey Street (the border area between LES and Chinatown). I like the orange color rhyme.
74. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Sunnyside, Queens. You don’t see the skyline of Manhattan when you are in Manhattan.
73. NEW YORK ON FOOT. The Bronx. The Bronx provides a welcome break from the grid of Manhattan. It also has the best nickname, “The Boogie Down Bronx”, or in casual conversation “The Boogie Down”.
71. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Brownsville, Brooklyn. Under the Rockaway Ave station on the 3 train, five stops from the end of the line.
70. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Bensonhurst, Brooklyn. The subway lines become train lines in the outer parts of the outer boroughs.
#69. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Hunter’s Point, Queens. This lot won’t stay empty for long. The population density of Manhattan is rapidly spilling over the Queensborough Bridge into Hunters Point and Long Island City.