I’m a New Yorker, and I run. I get bored doing laps around the park or running up and down the Hudson River path. Instead, I use my long-distance runs to explore the neighborhoods in my city, especially in the outer boroughs. I’ve decided to take a cheap digital camera with me on some of my runs to document the city and its changes as seen when crossing on foot.


Sunday, October 10, 2010

Staten Island Half Marathon

I ran it in respectable (for me) 2:05. I took only a few pictures because, well, it was a race and I thought I might have a shot at my first sub-two. Also the sun was low and bright, which made it hard to get good shots. But it's a terrific course—it winds along the Staten Island waterfront, so it has a lot of visual variety, which makes for a much easier run. Plus... free boat ride!

This was my first-ever run in the borough of Republicans and Wu-Tang. I look forward to coming back for a more leisurely look around and better pictures.

Runners board the ferry
From staten island
Getting ready for the race
From staten island
Tugboats
From staten island
Near the start. Much of the course is industrial waterfront like this.
From staten island
At mile 1 in St. George
From staten island
Staten Island Rail tracks
From staten island
Heading back, with a view of the Verrazano Narrows Bridge
From staten island
From staten island
After the finish, rewarded with a great view of the city
From staten island
The minor league SI Yankees park
From staten island
Walking back to the ferry, cheering on some tough runners
From staten island
Ferry terminal
From staten island
Last look back
From staten island


Sorry, but can't resist this... SI's biggest pop cultural moment?

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Woke up, it was an O.C. morning

A gloomy run from the hotel by the freeway.

Sunday, October 3, 2010

Vinegar Hill and DUMBO (Down Under Manhattan Bridge Overpass)

Shots from a short 3.5-miler to the little remnants of Vinegar Hill by the Brooklyn Navy Yard. 














From vinegar hill
Brick road in Brooklyn
From vinegar hill
Prayer flags
From vinegar hill
Married
From vinegar hill

From not-so Italian Carroll Gardens to Brooklyn's 8th Avenue Chinatown

New York City has, by some counts, five different Chinatowns. There's the famous one in Manhattan, Flushing in Queens, and two smaller Chinese neighborhoods in Elmhurst, Queens and along Avenue U in Brooklyn. The main Chinatown in Brooklyn is along more than twenty blocks of 8th Avenue in Sunset Park.    

I started my run in Carroll Gardens, an Italian neighborhood along the South Brooklyn waterfront. It wa Italian, anyway, when I lived there in the late 1990s, in my first New York apartment. My wife and I were part of the early wave of "new people"—that's what the neighbors called us. As in, "It's disgusting you'd even sell ravioli with fat-free cheese! That's for all the new people ruining this neighborhood!"* The new people pretty much run the joint now. Even Dennett Place—a narrow block in the shadow of the elevated subway tracks, with squat half-doors leading down to the garden apartments of cramped houses—had a couple of artists' open-studio shows this weekend.  Back in 1997, it seemed impregnably old-neighborhood, and I felt mildly nervous and conspicuously non-Italian just walking down that block.

Between Carroll Gardens and Sunset Park is a mostly dreary stretch of 4th Avenue, and the historic Green-Wood Cemetery, of which I could only snap a few glimpses from behind the fence.

This run was just over nine miles.

*Actual rant by the woman in front of me on line at Fratelli's pasta store, 1997. Her son came home with the wrong pasta.

Dennett Place... watch your head.
From Sunset Park
From Sunset Park
Green-Wood entrance
From Sunset Park
From Sunset Park
On 8th Ave.: More fun than a basket of putti
From Sunset Park
Name that produce
From Sunset Park
Sidewalk cobbler
From Sunset Park
From Sunset Park
Service while you wait
From Sunset Park

Friday, October 1, 2010

Picturing the outer boroughs, this time by a real photographer

A good friend of mine—who lives all the way out in Montgomery, Ill.!—sent me a link to the website of a photographer named Nathan Kensinger. He specializes in the industrial edges of New York City. He hits a lot of the same neighborhoods I pass through, but actually climbs over the fences to see what's usually hidden from those of us on the street. And his photos are beautiful.

Check out his essay on the rail tunnels hidden below East New York, and this one on the "desertification" of once-prime Williamsburg land.

His work is showing at the Capture Brooklyn show at the powerHouse Arena in Dumbo until October 15. I'm going to try to go this weekend. Here's a slideshow of images from the exhibition:


Capture Brooklyn - Winning Entries from New York Photo Festival on Vimeo.