Tuesday, November 5, 2013
This Is What New York City Could Look Like In 2033
Architectural renderings allow us to peer into the future of our beloved city without a crystal ball. New York City has some big changes coming, and here are 17 future attractions that will transform the Big Apple as we know it.
1. The New Penn Station
This summer a multibillion dollar plan will finally get underway to brighten up the dank rail station and better accommodate the 600,000 people that pass through it each day. But it'll be a while before the much-maligned space looks fresh and tidy. Madison Square Garden, which sits on top of the transit hub, was given 10 years to relocate.
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2. The New World Trade Center
The 1,776-foot Freedom Tower is slated for completion in early 2014, but construction on the surrounding skyscrapers, a performing arts center and a transportation hub are ongoing.
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3. Hudson Yards
After more than a decade of controversy -- including scrapped Olympic and Jets stadium plans -- developers have crafted an ambitious plan to convert 26 acres of rail facilities into the largest private real estate development in city history. Hudson Yards is “a $15 billion 15-structure mini-city on Manhattan’s West Side that will create more office space than exists in Portland, Ore.,” according to the New York Daily News.
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4. 5 Pointz ... Luxury Apartments?
Potentially the most legendary street art landmark in the world, Long Island City's 5 Pointz is set to be torn down in favor of a luxury high-rise. This controversial plan has inflamed the NYC arts community (and anyone with a soul), and a legal battle is ongoing.
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5. + POOL
"Like a giant strainer dropped in the river," + POOL aspires to filter dirty East River water and create a 285,000 gallon floating swimming pool between Manhattan and Brooklyn. The team raised over $270,000 to build a prototype -- a 35' x 35' float lab -- and aims for the + POOL to open in the summer of 2016, although they admit that permitting and approvals may delay this futuristic project.
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6. MoMA Tower
This project was stalled by the recession, but has recently surged back into development thanks to a $1 billion financing package from Asian investors. Tower Verre, as it’s known, will house 145 luxury condos and provide 36,000 square feet of new gallery space for the Museum of Modern Art. It's slated for completion in 2018 with an ultimate price tag of $1.3 billion.
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7. The Queensway
Taking a cue from the Westside’s massively successful Highline Park, Queens plans to convert its own stretch of abandoned railway tracks into an elevated park. Currently, two design firms are conducting a feasibility study.
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8. South Bronx Initiative Plan
In 2008, Mayor Bloomberg launched an array of projects in the South Bronx, collectively labeled the South Bronx Initiative Plan. From making the waterfront more accessible to building more affordable housing, the projects are focused on 3rd Avenue, the Bronx Civic Center and the Lower Grand Concourse.
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9. The New Whitney Museum
The Whitney Museum of American Art is relocating from the Upper East Side to the Meatpacking District. The new museum's construction cost $422 million and is slated for completion in 2015.
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10. Cornell NYC Tech
Cornell University is building a $2 billion mega-campus on Roosevelt Island, which sits just east of midtown Manhattan. The architects predict that the main building will produce as much energy as it consumes, and that the project will be completed by 2037.
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11. The New Westchester Avenue Station
SLO Architecture has proposed renovations to the abandoned Westchester Avenue Station in the South Bronx. Amtrak, whose Northeast Corridor runs by the site, wants to demolish the 100-plus-year-old building, but the designers seek to create a beautified waterfront and an entrance to Concrete Plant Park.
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12. Essex Crossing
In September, Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced a $1.1 billion plan to renovate the Essex Street Market and the surrounding streets in the Lower East Side. The project will include a “virtually unprecedented amount of affordable housing in a development of this scale,” according to the Wall Street Journal.
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13. The new Loew's Kings Theater
In 1977, Brooklyn's largest indoor theater closed its doors and fell into a state of disrepair. The mayor's office and its partners have pumped in $93.9 million to revitalize the Flatbush landmark. The theater is scheduled to open in 2014.
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14. East River Blueway
One part beautification, one part storm protection, the Blueway will revitalize Manhattan's East River shoreline stretching from the Brooklyn Bridge to East 38th Street. The plan does not yet have a budget or timeline.
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15. New York Wheel
The world’s largest ferris wheel will come to Staten Island in 2016. At 625 feet, the New York Wheel is predicted to draw millions of visitors to the borough.
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16. The LowLine
How do you add green space to an overly congested city like New York? For two ambitious entrepreneurs, the answer was "beneath our feet." After a successful Kickstarter campaign, the LowLine's creators are working with the MTA and the city to convert an abandoned, underground trolley station into a state-of-the-art, solar-panel-illuminated, $55 million park. The goal is to open by 2018.
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Family Disappears After Mississippi Car Crash: Sheriff's Office
A family of three disappeared after a fiery car accident in Mississippi on Saturday, authorities say.
Atira Hughes-Smith, 30, her 7-year-old son Jaidon Hill, and her husband, 34-year-old Laterry Smith are missing, Copiah County Sheriff Harold Jones told the Jackson Clarion-Ledger.
Their vehicle was found burning and upside down in a ditch on the side of a road near Carpenter in central Mississippi, WJTV reported. A witness extinguished the flaming wreckage, according to WAPT.
But curiously, the car was empty. The search for the family has grown to include the FBI, according to WLBT.
According to the station, Hughes-Smith's family said that she called them on Friday and said she was leaving town for a few days, but the call ended suddenly.
If you have any information on this case, you're asked to call Crime Stoppers at (601) 355-8477, the Copiah County Sheriff's Department at (601) 894-3011 or the FBI at (601) 948-5000.
'Dancing With The Stars' Results: 'Pretty Little Liars' Star Brant Daugherty Eliminated In Week 8
The results are in on "Dancing With the Stars," and it was the final rumba for "Pretty Little Liars" star Brant Daugherty. This week, the couple with the highest score was declared safe. With 28 points, this was Amber Riley and Derek Hough.
The remaining six couples were paired up with another couple and
competed in an dance-off. The winner of each pairing earned an extra
three points.
In this way, despite a solid 27 points before the dance-off, Daugherty and Peta Murgatroyd found themselves falling behind after they lost their dance-off against Leah Remini and Tony Dovolani -- with the three additional points, Remini and ovolani's score rose to 28. In fact, all three couples that lost their respective dance-offs found themselves in the bottom three.
In the end, though, it was the public vote that made the difference. Daugherty and Murgatroyd had the highest scores from the judges in the bottom three, but they didn't have the support from viewers at home. "I learned something I never thought I’d be able to learn in my life, I learned a lot about myself and I’m just very, very grateful for the opportunity," said Daugherty after his elimination.
The Top 6 compete as "Dancing With the Stars" continues every Monday at 8 p.m. ET on ABC.
TV Replay scours the vast television landscape to find the most interesting, amusing, and, on a good day, amazing moments, and delivers them right to your browser.
In this way, despite a solid 27 points before the dance-off, Daugherty and Peta Murgatroyd found themselves falling behind after they lost their dance-off against Leah Remini and Tony Dovolani -- with the three additional points, Remini and ovolani's score rose to 28. In fact, all three couples that lost their respective dance-offs found themselves in the bottom three.
In the end, though, it was the public vote that made the difference. Daugherty and Murgatroyd had the highest scores from the judges in the bottom three, but they didn't have the support from viewers at home. "I learned something I never thought I’d be able to learn in my life, I learned a lot about myself and I’m just very, very grateful for the opportunity," said Daugherty after his elimination.
The Top 6 compete as "Dancing With the Stars" continues every Monday at 8 p.m. ET on ABC.
TV Replay scours the vast television landscape to find the most interesting, amusing, and, on a good day, amazing moments, and delivers them right to your browser.
Richard Shoop, New Jersey Mall Shooting Suspect, Found Dead
The man suspected of opening fire in a New Jersey mall on Monday night has been found dead, CNN reported.
According to The Star-Ledger, the body was discovered inside a Foot Locker store at the Westfield Garden State Plaza in Paramus, N.J. Law enforcement sources told the newspaper that the suspect had a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
The shopping center was placed in lockdown for hours while police officers searched for the gunman and evacuated patrons and store employees.
No one else was injured in the shooting.
Although witnesses said they heard multiple shots, only one bullet casing was found at the scene.
MORE FROM THE ASSOCIATED PRESS:
PARAMUS, N.J. (AP) — A 20-year-old man suspected of firing multiple shots and causing a lockdown at New Jersey's largest shopping mall has been found dead of a self-inflicted wound, authorities said Tuesday. Bergen County Prosecutor John Molinelli said the body of Richard Shoop, 20, of Teaneck was found in a back area of the Garden State Plaza mall in Paramus. He said Shoop killed himself with the same weapon he used at the mall and that a note was found.
There were no other injuries.
Paramus Police Kenneth Ehrenberg said Shoop's body was discovered around 3:20 a.m. Tuesday deep within a lower level of the mall that is not a public area. Shoop did not work at the mall, he said, and police are still seeking a motive for the shooting.
Chaos erupted shortly before the mall's 9:30 p.m. closing time on Monday when authorities said a man dressed in black and wearing what is believed to be a motorcycle helmet fired shots. There were no injuries.
Witnesses said the sound of gunfire sent customers and employees rushing hysterically for the exits and hiding places at the mall, which will be closed on Tuesday.
Jessica Stigliano, 21, of Ridgefield, who'd been in the food court, told The Associated Press that she had thought, "Not many people run for their life, but that's what I'm doing right now."
Bergen County spokeswoman Jeanne Baratta told the AP that SWAT teams concentrated their search in the northeast corner of the 2.2 million-square-foot mall, near a Nordstrom store, believing the suspect might still be in the mall.
She said authorities found one bullet casing.
Hundreds of law enforcement officers converged on the mall, which was put on lockdown. New Jersey State Police landed a helicopter in the parking lot and SWAT teams with K-9 units went through the mall and evacuated anyone who was still there.
Nick Woods was working in the Lego store when a woman ran by shouting that there was a shooting.
Woods said his supervisor locked them in a back room, along with a man and a child who ran into the store. When they finally peeked out two hours later, he said they saw police officers standing outside and Woods called 911 to ask that the officers be told they were coming out.
He said the emergency operator told him she couldn't contact individual police officers and that he should walk out with his hands in the air.
"I had to go out of the store shouting at the officers with my hands up, and they turned and pointed their guns at me," Woods said. "It was one of the scariest experiences of my life."
Joel Castaneda, 18, of Englewood, who was working at the Ann Taylor Loft store, also spent time locked in a back room. He said he heard several loud bangs and thought they were from construction at the mall, but then saw people running.
He said people rushed into his store and they locked themselves in a back room — employees and customers alike — where they pulled out cellphones to try to get news or reach loved ones.
Carlos Sinde, 36, of Queens, N.Y., was alerted by fire alarms going off while he was watching previews for the 9:20 p.m. showing of the movie "Gravity" at the mall.
He said he walked into the mall where someone was saying "I think there was a shooting," but he didn't take it seriously. Then, security guards ran up, urging customers to leave. He said one security guard was crying.
"Once the security guards started telling us what was going on, that's when there was hysteria," he said.
Early Tuesday, families were being escorted by police to a Chili's restaurant on the outskirts of the mall area to be reunited with others who had been in the mall for hours.
Althea Brown, 26, of Paterson told NorthJersey.com she was in a clothing store when she saw a man walk by and then heard three shots followed by two more. She said he appeared to be wearing body armor and was wearing a helmet with the visor pulled up.
Najde Waters, who works in customer service at H&M, said when they heard shots his manager and store workers followed an action plan they'd rehearsed for just such a scenario.
"We all prepare, like schools do. We have a plan where we all meet up in the back of the store and if we can exit together out the front we do, but in this case we had to exit out the back," Waters said.
He said they went to their meeting place near a light pole.
The mall, which has more than 270 stores, is located about 15 miles northwest of Manhattan.
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