306. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Midtown East.
301. NEW YORK ON FOOT. The Bronx.
300. NEW YORK ON FOOT. A Midtown rhapsody in blue and orange.
296. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Turtle Bay, Manhattan. New York has its own look, but often its just the sheer volume of visual stimuli.
295. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Williamsburg, Brooklyn.
294. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Times Square Station. I have no idea what my phone camera was thinking on this one.
293. NEW YORK ON FOOT. The Bronx. Riverdale. The most non New York look in the most New York borough.
292. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Morningside Heights.
289. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Queens Bridge. The only thrill that perserveres in this nutty place is its unique beauty.
288. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Brownsville, Brooklyn.
287. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Upper East Side. 5th Avenue. This neighborhood has “a high percentage of the world’s billionaires living within a thousand feet”.
286. NEW YORK ON FOOT. East New York, Brooklyn.
285. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Randall’s Island.
284. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Bensonhurst, Brooklyn. “Spike of Bensonhurst” is still one of the best movie titles of all time.
283. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Sunnyside, Queens.
279. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Morningside Heights.
274. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Third Avenue. Midtown. 14 days to Christmas.
270. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Bath Beach, Brooklyn. A tiny neighborhood south of Bensonhurst on the southern shore of BKLYN. The Verrazano Narrows Bridge is in the background. “Bath Beach held one of Brooklyn’s earliest African-American settlements. Freed slaves were given a parcel of land to settle in the mid-nineteenth century.” (Wikipedia)
Story #269. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Williamsburg, Brooklyn.
268. NEW YORK ON FOOT. Sunnyside, Queens.