Posts Tagged ‘USA: New York City’

NYC: Progress at the World Trade Center

January 20th, 2011

I recently visited my brother’s office, overlooking Church Street in lower Manhattan, and had a great view of the World Trade Center complex. My bro is one of thousands of people working on the reconstruction of the World Trade Center.

It’s hard to appreciate the scale of this massive construction project from ground level … seeing it from above really drove home how much work has already been done below the surface. Foundational work included clearing the debris down to the bedrock, replacing huge retaining walls, and then rebuilding several stories of commuter train lines and subway lines … all  below ground level.

Now the buildings are starting to rise above the surface, most notably Tower One, which will be the complex’s main tower and at 1,776 feet will be slightly taller than the original Twin Towers. (Yes, the 1776 figure was deliberately chosen.) One World Trade Center is going up at a rate of a floor per week, and is already past the halfway point and should be finished by this time next year. It will include 3 million square feet of office space, 104 floors, an observation deck, two skyline restaurants, and a ton of shopping.

Here is the site plan to the World Trade Center, courtesy of the Port Authority of NY/NJ’s World Trade Center Web site. (Click around the site, as there is a lot of cool information about the revitalized World Trade Center complex.) My vantage point is from the building colored yellow and marked with a purple star.


Here is the shot I took out from my brother’s office window in mid-January, 2011.



1. Tower 1 – One World Trade Center
2. One of the world’s tallest cranes!
3. Footprint of South Tower (to become memorial pool)
4. Footprint of North Tower (to become memorial pool)
5. Performing Arts Center
6. Transportation Hub (PATH terminal)
7. Tower 4
8. Visitors’ Center
9. WTC Memorial

As one who grew up seeing the New York skyline with the Twin Towers marking the southern end of Manhattan, I am extremely stoked that this sad, gaping hole in the city’s skyline will soon be filled.

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NYC: Stellar Bites – Lombardi’s Pizzeria and Rice to Riches

January 6th, 2011

Sometimes the tourists get it right. Case in point: the historic Lombardi’s Original Pizza of New York. Billed as “America’s first pizzeria,” it occupies a top spot in the pizza-snobbish Big Apple, its praises sung by Zagat’s and every tourist rag from Travel + Leisure to Lonely Planet . As a result, it’s crawling with out-of-towners, which normally would make me flee, flee, flee. If you share that instinct, though, ignore it and brave the tourist hordes for a damn good pizza pie.

The secret is Lombardi’s thin hand-tossed crust, baked to crispy perfection in white-tiled charcoal ovens. These antiquated ovens are no longer allowed in NYC — one great excuse to visit this throwback to 1905. The crust is a testament to the difference a pizza oven can make: thin enough to render a satisfying crunch, strong enough to support fresh mozzarella, juicy tomatoes, charred pepperoni rounds cupping hot little pools of oil, or whatever other classic toppings you pick. The outer rim is crunchy on the outside, chewy on the inside, and just dense enough to soak up all the pizza’s juices and oils. Get the original “margherita” (mozzarella, tomato sauce, fresh basil and romano), add your toppings, and wash it down with a pitcher of cold Brooklyn Lager.

Large margherita with tomatoes, spinach & wild mushrooms

At the edge of Little Italy in the fun Nolita neighborhood, Lombardi’s has an old-school Italian ambiance with checkered tablecloths, vintage Italian movie posters, and Sinatra crooning over the speakers. The restaurant is a labyrinth of small dining rooms upstairs and down, some of which require a trip through the busy kitchen to get to your table. Expect to drop between $25 and $35 per person if you order beer or wine.

Leave room for dessert, because when you stagger through the front doors of Lombardi’s and across narrow Spring Street, you’ll run into Rice to Riches, a flamboyant rice-pudding bar with a 1960s futuristic go-go flair and unapologetic pro-dessert stance. With at least a dozen daily flavors of rice pudding (try Butterscotch Boulevard, Almond Shmalmond, or Panna Cotta) and toppings (like espresso crumble, toasted coconut, or jelly), it’s classic comfort food disguised as an über-hip dish. This is the treat that appeals to my inner 6-year-old: sweet, creamy, compellingly lumpy and able to be eaten at the Jetsons’ kitchen table. Portions range from $6.50 per solo portion to $35 for the Moby (serves 10).

Long counter for puddings and toppings to the right,

futuristic seating all around.

Hee!

Click below for more reviews of Lombardi’s Pizza and Rice to Riches:

Lombardi's Pizza on Urbanspoon
Rice To Riches on Urbanspoon

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NYC: Xmas and the City, Part 3

January 4th, 2011

The last of my holiday 2010 snaps from New York City.  The photos from this last installment were all taken Christmas night. The holidays may be over, but the decorations are still up. Which is nice, since the Big Apple is currently a giant dirty slush puddle from the blizzard that dumped two feet of snow onto the city the day after I took these shots.

Happy New Year, y’all!

NYC: Quidditch World Cup 2010

November 27th, 2010

Anyone who shares my Harry Potter geekery knows that Quidditch is a magical game played on flying broomsticks. What you may not know (unless you also share my Harry Potter über-geekery) is that a Muggle version of Quidditch exists; it’s played at college and high-school levels, and for the past four years they’ve held a championship tournament — the Quidditch World Cup. Click here for the Muggle Quidditch rules: the game is a blend of dodgeball, volleyball, flag football and tag. Oh, and you run around with magical broomsticks between your legs (insert sophomoric but probably funny joke here).

This year, Quidditch teams gathered in NYC to compete for highest honor in all of fake sportdom, with the championship game played between Tufts and Middlebury. Though the title ultimately went to Middlebury, I gotta say that Tufts had arguably the best team name and cheer (see video). The crowd consisted mostly of college students who have a strong vein of geekery, little kids with their parents, and really anyone wanting to indulge their inner kid. Good times.

Here are some photos and videos of the championship game of the Quidditch World Cup tournament held in New York City between Middlebury and Tufts, and from the awards ceremony that followed:

And the video:

Game footage between Middlebury and Tufts, Quidditch World Cup 2010. Part One:

Game footage between Middlebury and Tufts, Quidditch World Cup 2010. Part Two:

McGill University accepts the sportsmanship award. Drunken American frat boys attempt to sing Canadian national anthem along with them, nearly causing international incident:



Pitt accepts third-place award, gets all Neil Diamondy:

Tufts accepts second-place award and sings awesome Quidditch team song:

And finally, the champions: Middlebury College and their victory conga line:

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Workouts on the Road: Bring it to The Bar!

November 10th, 2010

Traveling a lot can involve exercise (mainly in the form of lugging baggage), but it’s often hard to maintain a regular workout schedule when you’re constantly on the road. One way to stay in top shape while roaming is to incorporate The Bar Method into your fitness routine.

The Bar Method is an isometric interval training program that combines elements of ballet, yoga and Pilates. Each grueling, hour-long class is aimed at building the core and working
every major muscle group to exhaustion, then stretching deeply. Celebs such as Drew Barrymore, Dita von Teese and Anna Paquin rave over The Bar Method’s ability to burn fat and sculpt muscle.

One can find Bar Method studios in and around most major cities in the U.S. The cost is pricey, but less so than a personal trainer, and you get what you pay for — this is a workout that does work. It’s an almost zero-impact program that can be modified to fit physical limitations, and like yoga, can be practiced at any age. For the times when you don’t have access to a Bar Method studio, you can pack the Bar Method DVDs for a guided workout on the road. Gear required? Yoga wear (pants must extend below the knees) and socks — not much to fit in your bag.

Recently I visited four Bar Method studios over the course of 10 days and found each upscale, spa-like studio wonderfully consistent. Every class involves the same approach: a focused workout where the instructors constantly offer personal attention, pushing you to your capacity. There is no hiding in the back and phoning it in at the Bar —and that’s true in all classes, everywhere.

"Bar Butts" in a row at The Bar Method Englewood

Here are the studios I visited and my observations of each:

The Bar Method Englewood — This studio is located in an affluent suburb of New York City. Classes here focus more on stretching than any of the other four studios I visited, with the instructors taking the time to fully explain each stretch and push students to put as much effort into stretching as they do into the isometric exercises. This has been the studio where I’ve been working out most regularly of late, and I’ve seen a dramatic leap in my flexibility as a result.

The Bar Method Vancouver — I visited this studio a few days into its grand opening as the only Bar Method location outside the U.S. This studio reaffirmed The Bar Method’s assertion that the classes are challenging for everyone, no matter what their fitness level. Because the studio and clientele were brand new, the studio offered mostly beginner/ basic classes. However, the goal is to perform the exercises with perfect form, and even if you’ve nailed that, the instructors offer advanced options to make basic moves more challenging. The result is that even an advanced student in a beginner class can get a good workout.

The Bar Method – Downtown San Francisco — I first started taking Bar classes at this location, which is constantly busy. Despite the flow of people coming and going from its glass doors, the Downtown San Francisco staff get to know all their students and their capabilities. Even after I’d been absent for months, upon my return, I was greeted by name by the staff. My instructor commented on my improved form since she’d seen me last — a telling sign of the personal attention each student receives. San Francisco classes seem to me to focus more on demanding butt exercises than other studios.

The Bar Method SoHo — The only Bar Method in New York City is the one where I saw the most men present; most Bar devotees and instructors are women. I often wonder why more guys don’t join Bar Method studios — it’s a great workout for everyone and the studios are hopping with super-fit ladies. My instructor in SoHo was McKenzie, visiting from the Downtown San Francisco studio (and she recognized me, too) — she led my class through a heavily butt-intensive workout typical of San Francisco instructors. It was great to see her in this new context, and a nice reminder that Bar instructors can be mobile, too, and get their travel workout at The Bar just like the rest of us.

The fabulous owners of The Bar Method-Downtown, during a typical workout

Bar Method: A Minute of Power & Beauty

Click here for a list of Bar Method studio locations.

Click here to buy Bar Method DVDs.

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