Surveying the damage and the darkness in Lower Manhattan

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Church St., Lower Manhattan
(Photos © J. Maus/BikePortland)

Coverage from New York City
made possible by:

Lower Manhattan — including the Financial District, One World Trade Tower, and Chinatown — are all still without power tonight. It’s surreal down there. Pitch black and relatively quiet except for the frequent blaring of sirens (and cabbies yelling at each other).

Unlike the rosy tone of my Williamsburg/Brooklyn post earlier today, I’m afraid things do not look good for Lower Manhattan. Crews are working feverishly to pump water out of high rises and the Hugh Carey/Brooklyn Battery Tunnel is still completely submerged.

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Battery Park is one big mess, with downed trees, branches and debris scattered all about. The storm surge had its way with the sand bags.

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On the way over, Brooklyn Bridge was packed with people. And of course, there are quite a few people out on bikes. With no traffic signals and very few cars, riding around Lower Manhattan right now is pretty fantastic (if you’re into that sort of thing). Anita Singh of BrooklynByBike put it best, when she posted to Twitter, “If you haven’t gotten your #bikenyc out, lower manhattan is all dark and relatively car free. Once in a lifetime biking experience.”

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The Municipal Building, lit by floodlights.

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The One World Trade Center tower is dark for the first time ever (for some reason, a few buildings in Battery Park City (on the left) have electricity).
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The Chrysler Building stands like a beacon over Lower Manhattan.
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Chinatown
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Watch where you’re going!
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View from the Manhattan Bridge with Chinatown in the foreground and the Empire State Building in the background.
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Actor and comic Frank Von was biking around and shooting video for his documentary. I met him on the Manhattan Bridge
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Hudson River Greenway.

The Manhattan Bridge is especially interesting. Half of it has power, and the other half doesn’t. I heard several people riding toward Manhattan, and upon noticing the path lights suddenly go dark, they hooted and hollered into the darkness (and one guy just yelled, “Awww, shit!”)

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Looking east toward Brooklyn.
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Looking east toward Brooklyn, right at the light/dark threshold. This couple stopped to look back at the Manhattan skyline.
Sandy aftermath - Lower Manhattan

And here’s the view the other way, into the darkness of Lower Manhattan.

Thanks for following along with my New York City coverage. I know I’ve got some Portland stuff that needs to be covered. I’ll get to that… just as soon as my brain can fit anything else in by this amazing city.

— This post is part of my ongoing New York City coverage. I’m here for a week to cover the NACTO Designing Cities conference and the city’s bike culture in general. This special reporting trip was made possible by Planet Bike, Lancaster Engineering, and by readers like you. Thank you! You can find all my New York City coverage here.

Jonathan Maus (Publisher/Editor)

Jonathan Maus (Publisher/Editor)

Founder of BikePortland (in 2005). Father of three. North Portlander. Basketball lover. Car owner and driver. If you have questions or feedback about this site or my work, feel free to contact me at @jonathan_maus on Twitter, via email at maus.jonathan@gmail.com, or phone/text at 503-706-8804. Also, if you read and appreciate this site, please become a supporter.

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Shetha
Shetha
11 years ago

Stunning photos, Jon. Wow… Thanks for sharing with us.

Machu Picchu
Machu Picchu
11 years ago

Gotham.

Sean G
11 years ago

What a time to be in NYC. Glad you’re there to share it first hand with the folks at home.

Joe Adamski
Joe Adamski
11 years ago

Billy Joel comes to mind:

I’ve seen the lights go out on Broadway-
I saw the Empire State laid low.
And life went on beyond the Palisades,
They all bought Cadillacs-
And left there long ago.

Tim Davis
Tim Davis
11 years ago
Reply to  Joe Adamski

And to think that Billy Joel was only 5 years off (Miami 2017)! Sorry, couldn’t resist. 🙂 Wishing the best for everyone in the wonderful New York area…

Dan Kaufman
11 years ago

Thanks for getting out there and shooting, Jonathan. The images are eerie and striking.

Ryan Aslett
11 years ago

Seriously man, this is awesome.

a_pom3
a_pom3
11 years ago

Wow! That looks like a lot of fun. I’m jealous I can’t experience such a night ride 😀 Would be so cool to blaze the city with 3000 lumens, zippin’ and ridin’ around blowing all the dead signals.

annefi
annefi
11 years ago

Your photos keep getting better and better. Great on the scene reporting!

Ted Buehler
11 years ago

Thanks for the on-the-scene reporting.

The Oregonian reported, last week, that the Portland/Metro 2040 plan would have zero reduction in Greenhouse Gas Emissions from transportation. Reduction from current levels. (I cant find the link. Anyone?)

If frickin Portland is unwilling to even make an attempt at reducing GHG emissions, it’s time to raise the seawalls in Battery Park by about 5′. & everywhere else in the world…

:^(

Ted Buehler

peejay
peejay
11 years ago
Reply to  Ted Buehler

Really, I have lost all hope.

Al from PA
Al from PA
11 years ago

Stunning photos, the best I’ve seen on post Sandy, global climate change era lower Manhattan (more to come…). The red-sky photo is particularly chilling.

It’s significant that the best way to get around in this landscape is the bicycle…

btw, “not sure what building that is”–Empire State–

patrickz
patrickz
11 years ago

Stunning is the right word for the photos and I enjoy the “man on the ground” reporting —or “man on the bike”. Some of these images are close to being art.

joel
11 years ago
Reply to  patrickz

I think all of them are art!

joel
11 years ago

Great reporting and amazing photos. I would love to show them in my gallery in Spring- you down??

thefuture
thefuture
11 years ago

This is excellent research to bring back to Portland as we face our own pending earthquake disaster. When transportation is disrupted bikes are so much more versatile right after the disaster and in the days and weeks following to get people mobile again. All indications are that after the earthquake we are going to be isolated in many ways when the bridges fail. Fuel supplies will run low but do bikes need gas? No.

jim
jim
11 years ago
Reply to  thefuture

Cargo bikes will play a huge roll when the big one does hit portland. We may not have power to run gas pumps, debris blocking roads…
This is a good reminder of how important it is to have a decent head light, not just a blinky light, but something that will actually light the road.

Terry D
Terry D
11 years ago

No hurry on PDX coverage….I am sure anything can wait a few more days. Keep the NYC coverage going!

Anonymous
Anonymous
11 years ago

I thought this was Bike Portland and not Bike New York?

Joe
Joe
11 years ago

Gotham City STANDS STRONG! Thanks for the coverage

William Furr
William Furr
11 years ago

Similar experience, though not quite as intense, with a big Boston power outage earlier in the year. All the drivers were amazingly polite and lots of folks stayed home. It was quite the cycling experience.

Sadly, cycling in the aftermath of the storm in Boston is actually pretty shitty. Bike lanes are choked with piles of wet leaves and lots of sticks and branches. Car drivers are as sociopathic as ever, and not at all sympathetic to cyclists riding in the travel lanes to avoid the trash in the bike lanes.

I can only hope the street sweeping crews hit all the streets and clean up the gutters and bike lanes soon.

Editz
Editz
11 years ago

Waiting for Snake Plissken to show up.

Ted Buehler
11 years ago

Here’s the link, kids.
http://www.oregonlive.com/portland/index.ssf/2012/10/keeping_downtown_portland_vibr.html

“As they work on a wide-ranging plan for the future of the central city, a blueprint to ensure that downtown Portland’s next 20 years are as successful as its past 40, planners and citizen volunteers have come up with a strange, fascinating, seemingly counterintuitive equation.”

“For Portland to remain the healthy cultural and financial heart of the region, they say, the number of trips made downtown each day must double. The amount of greenhouse gas emitted must remain the same.”

Um, okay… Whatever you say, experts…

Ted Buehler

Ted Buehler
11 years ago

The catch here, of course, is that it’s nice that Downtown Portland knows what it needs to do to remain “the healthy cultural and financial heart…” but they’ve overlooked a simple fact that if Portland does this (and every other metro area) it will NOT result in the desired vibrancy because the resulting greenhouse gas emissions will cause many other downtowns around the world to become modern Atlantises…

Ted Buehler

jack
jack
11 years ago

great shots. riding in Manhattan with no lights sounds wild.

Ed Vranizan
Ed Vranizan
11 years ago

Perhaps bicycles should be considered as an intergral part of disaster response planning.

Matt
Matt
11 years ago

Love that 3rd picture. Well framed with great detail in the shadows. Keep it up!

Craig Harlow
Craig Harlow
11 years ago

I wonder if–and how many–people seized this opportunity to fly to NYC with their bikes? If only….

Mt
Mt
11 years ago

Thanks for the great pics!

aaron
aaron
11 years ago

Jonathan thank you so much for the pictures. I’ve been watching a lot for coverage of bikey-ness in Manhattan post Sandy. Of course no media will touch that with a pole. The pictures really help.
Keep up the good work