Posts Tagged ‘new york city’

Photos: Woodside, a neighborhood built by mold

Friday, September 3rd, 2010

People on the move in Woodside, Queens in New York CityWoodside, Queens is one of the best-kept secrets in New York City. It’s a vibrant, diverse and taco-truck-filled community nestled just east of Sunnyside, Queens — the greatest urban neighborhood in the world, where I happen to reside. Ok, maybe third greatest.

But Woodside’s secret is that it was built, in part, by a nasty little water mold.

Be my guest if you want to jump right into some recent photos, otherwise stick around for a quick-and-sciencey history lesson about the area.

In the mid-1800s, Ireland was having a rough time. And that’s putting it lightly.

Caustic social and political issues had been piling up, potato crops were failing (thanks to a nasty water mold which caused potato blight), starvation gripped most of the population and disease was spreading rampantly.

During a span of about two decades, in fact, the country lost roughly 2 million people/25 percent of its population. Half of those losses were to death, while the other half emigrated to U.S. cities such as New York City and Boston.

About a quarter of these 1 million emigrants settled into NYC, and then-Nassau county — which the Woodside and Sunnyside areas were a part of in the 1850s — took a lion’s share of that immigration action. In its heyday during the late 1800s, Woodside was about 80 percent Irish. That’s tough to gauge now, however, as the U.S. census only asks for white/black/Hispanic/Asian/other, and that whole America-as-a-melting-pot thing.*

Now about that potato crop failure, which is a huge component of the infamous Great Famine(more…)

Photos: Manhattanhenge

Sunday, July 11th, 2010

Manhattanhenge 2010 sunset silhouetteManhattan’s streets are aligned on a wonderfully regular grid, a relief to perfectionist types out there who crave order in their arrangement of asphalt.

But it ain’t perfect, and I’m not talking about downtown’s quagmire of back streets.

As it turns out, New York City’s grid is slightly skewed in a clockwise direction because, well… it makes more sense given the shape and direction of “Mannahatta.”

Cartographers often fool the foolhardy, however, by rotating streets into a more aesthetically pleasing arrangement (to agree with a map’s rectangular shape). Don’t believe me? Look for the compass on MTA’s subway map. It’s hanging out in the Long Island Sound.

Anyway, this regularity that’s a wee bit off creates not one but two golden opportunities — arguably four, if you like seeing half our backyard star — for photography and astronomy nerds.

(more…)

Photos: Snowstorm

Sunday, June 27th, 2010

December 2009 New York snowstormUpdate (7/20/2010): I’ve uploaded a second set of snowy photos taken in Port Jefferson, NY. Brrr…


As I type this, sweat is beading down my forehead — and I haven’t even moved for a few hours.

Some argue there’s nothing like a muggy New York summer, with insult added to injury thanks to the heat island effect. But I can’t stand it any more.

So to cool off, here’s a blizzard from December 19, 2009*. Bonus: a few ugly sweaters in there as well.

* Yes, I am THAT far behind in getting my photos posted. But I’ll catch up… one of these days.

Social media time machine: Where do science journalists fit in?

Thursday, April 1st, 2010

Social media diagram, courtesy Laurel Papworth and Gary HayesHave a few minutes to help science journalists and writers out? Oh, and me.

Good. Read on.

Science Writers in New York has invited me to present for 10 minutes on “the future of social media in the next decade.” (RSVP on the Facebook event page)

Honestly, I think this is an insanity-inducing topic — even with the help of pros like David A. Dobbs and Nancy Shute.

Yet I’m a firm believer in the wisdom of (smart + relevant) crowds and the goodwill of an invested community.

So I really need your help. Especially if you’re a science journalist/writer, tech/internet/social media nerd — or both.

Here are the topics SWINY asked panelists to cover: (more…)

New York’s Subway Air Sniffers

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

That weird device in New York City’s subway system from the previous post? It’s an air quality monitor.

After a few dead-end phone calls and e-mails to the NYC DEP, I finally walked up to a police officer at the Union Square precinct, which is just a fart away from the machine (pun intended). Rough transcript of our conversation:

Me: Excuse me, what the heck is that machine out there?

Cop: It’s an air testa’, you know, to make sure there nuthin’ bad we’re breathin’ in.

Me: Do you know what it’s looking for or measuring, specifically?

Cop: Bad stuff. Stuff you don’t wanna breathe in.

Me: Like radon? Or aerosols? Or…?

Cop: Bad stuff, so we don’t get hurt down here.

Thanks for that explanation, because I had previously thought to myself, the subway is full of wonderful-smelling, healthy air particles. Such as brake dust, excrement, urine, vomit, etc.

Captain obvious aside, Cosmopolitanaut Kaylen also verified this conclusion in my previous post. She would know. She processes the data they generate.

But even Kaylen raised the point: how does it work? (more…)

What’s the frak is at NYC’s Union Square subway stop?

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

device in Union Square subway station with NYC DEP logo on sideEvery day — make that twice a day — a vexing questions pops into my head as I stroll through Union Square’s subway stop en route to work:

What the heck is this thing/device/contraption?

Obviously a big “New York City Department of Environmental Protection” is slapped across the side. But Google University doesn’t seem to help… the best that comes up is a noise detector (i.e. for loud noises that may harm riders).

It can’t be that lame… or could it?

My neighbor Patrick suspects that it’s an anti-terrorism device.* A bomb sniffer, perhaps? A biological weapons detector? A vacuum to suck up only terrorists as they walk by, ala Ghost Busters?

The puzzling part is the cup on the top, not to mention that all of the goodies are locked up in steel boxes.

Other guesses include a mosquito catcher, an air quality monitor, a data relay (for information collection on tracks?), or a make-people-who-use-the-subway-go-insane-because-they-can’t-figure-out-what-this-ha-ha-ha device.

If you have a guess, or better yet know what this is, please put ‘er in the comments section.

* Let’s hope I haven’t broken any law by writing this…