Monthly Archives: July 2024

Day Three Hundred and Fifteen Walking the New York Fancy Food Show June23rd-June 25th, 2024

One of the highlights of my industry and my favorite amongst the big shows geared towards the hospitality field is the New York Fancy Food Show held at the Javits Center every June.

The Specialty Food Association sponsors the show every year at the Javits Center

https://www.specialtyfood.com/

The Fancy Food Show is aisle after aisle of the latest products that will be stocking our grocery stores, specialty shops and gift stores. From the latest cheeses and pates to snack foods, flavorful drinks and waters to the latest heat and eat prepared foods to almost anything else to stock your pantry with, they are being showcased at this show. It takes me the full three days to get through the show just to walk down the aisles and see what new products there are to sample. That is not enough time plus you get over-whelmed with all the foods to taste and flavors to experience.

My first day I concentrated on the first floor of the show. The first several aisles were dedicated to vendor after vendor of cheeses. I have learned over the years to pace myself when I start the show, or you go into system overload. You have to take your time in the first three aisles of the show or else you will not be able to enjoy all the other samples you need to experience to form an opinion.

I was funny that I felt this way because when I said this to a cheese merchant, she repeated that comment back to me. She said, “You know, I keep asking everyone to try our cheese, but they keep saying they have to pace themselves. Why do they keep saying that?” I reminded her that we have aisles and aisles of food to see and a lot of first timers start to fill themselves up on the first three aisles and then can’t handle the rest of the show. She did not seem pleased with that answer and went back to work.

I continued to take my time walking the Food Show. Traveling aisle after aisle of cheeses, crackers, cookies and olive oils. The snack foods selection was extensive this year. I guess the pandemic got people creating food items that they liked, and they want to make a cottage business out of it. The problem is that there are only so many different ways to make caramel popcorn or chocolate chip cookies.

The biggest problem with food items at the show is when vendors are trying to be too specific who they want their customers to be or catering to a niche customer who is gluten intolerant or looking for all natural foods. I have had to keep a straight face when I had to sample all natural sodas with no sugar or cookies without eggs, wheat, sugar and are dairy free that tasted like saw dust. I know what the vendor is trying to achieve but when an item has no flavor no one will want to buy it. Some products can achieve this but somewhere in the recipe they will have to put a few ingredients back.

I found a lot of successful items at the show that did not agree with judges when it came time to give awards out. Some of their choices just had no flavor, taste or appeal to a lot of customers. I judged products by a couple of standards, how different was it in product, how it tasted and was the flavoring different from other items on the market and creativity in packaging. Some of the snack foods and sodas that won awards boggled me because they had no flavor and no enticing packaging.

I found that some of the best products in the French and Korean Food Pavilions. The Asian countries really had the pulse of appealing to a younger customer or an older customer who liked things from their childhood. The French always know packaging. They are famous for it. The color schemes and the pictures just appeal to a sophisticated customer. It is also the taste of their foods. The flavors are direct and intense. Their snacks had more unusual flavors and better cooking methods. There just seemed like they wanted to bring gourmet foods to the snack masses of the United States. I was impressed by a handful of items that I highly recommend to those who want to indulge in a treat.

The following were the best products I sampled on the first day of the 2024 Fancy Food Show and I want to share them with other foodies and culinarians. These products stood out the most for their taste and packaging:

In the French Pavilion, the first brand I highly recommend is the potato chip brand Simply Gourmand brand Brets, whose crispy flavorful snacks were the best potato chips at the show. in the Snack Food category, I thought they were the best I tasted. With their unique flavors, the best being the Camembert Cheese and the Miel Moutarde, the honey Dijon mustard flavors and colorful packaging, were outstanding. I had to beg the vendor for two bags to take home to sample. The crispy fried French potatoes were perfectly flavored and salted and they filled the bag with chips and not air like American companies.

The Brets brand of potato chips by Simply Gourmand

https://www.simplygourmand.com/brets/

The samples I took home were excellent. I loved the crunch and the perfect seasonings.

The other item from the French Pavilion were the cookie brands by Gozoki Deceures, both the Maison Jacquemart and the Noots. These buttery delights were a treat when I tried the different varieties.

The cookies from Maison Jacquemart were excellent

I sampled the various flavors of cookies from Maison Jacquemart and the cookies look as good as they taste. I was able to try their Les Petits Lunettes, a small type of Linder tart cookie filled with strawberry jelly and chocolate cream and their mini Almond cakes, that tasted like a Madeline. You could taste the sweet butter in the cookie dough and the fresh jelly in the cookie. The crunchiness of the cookie with the sweetness of the filling was a delectable combination.

It was the same with their tartlets as well. There was a thick layer of chocolate, strawberry and apricot jelly on the top of their cookies with a buttery cookie base that showed me that they did not skimp anywhere when producing their product.

Gozoki Douceurs products were my pick for best baked products at the show

https://www.linkedin.com/company/gozoki/

The samples they gave me of the Strawberry Jelly and the Chocolate filled tarts were delicious

In the Canadian Pavilion, around lunch time on my first day of the show, I sampled the Chicken Nuggets by Al Safa Foods and these were impressive especially the spicy ones. They were juicy on the outside and crisp on the inside and the spicy flavor had a nice kick to it.

The Al Safa Chicken nuggets were one of the best chicken products I tasted at the show

What I like about Al Safa Chicken products is the quality and taste of the chicken. The product cooked up nicely and the taste would appeal to children and adults alike.

in the Italian Pavilion, there were many honey products being sampled at the show but the best flavored honey was from Casa Folino were stood out for flavor and packaging.

The Casa Folino flavored honey is a different alternative to jellies when topping toast or biscuits

The Casa Folino line of honeys had a zippy set of flavors and were unique to the show. Other vendors offered different flavored honeys due to the bees or the region they were produced but this company added the flavorings to the high quality honey making a unique accompaniment to biscuits an

The Asian Pavilion offered so many amazing products and these are the best of the best when I walked this part of the show:

I was very impressed with food items from both Korea and Thailand with a few vendors from Taiwan as well. What I liked about the Asian food products is the unique flavors and bright packaging of their products. They made their food products appealing to the eye and engaging to the senses and the packaging was fun. Once they reeled you in with the engaging packaging, the flavors were very intense with different tastes like Rose, Melon and Mango for sweets and peppers and cheeses for their savory products.

HBAF Snack Products

https://en.hbaf.com/

These Cheeseburger popcorn snack from HBAF were very impressive. The seasonings really did taste like a cheeseburger and you could taste the beef and tomato flavorings in the popcorn. Their other snacks had unusual flavors as well. I think these innovative snacks will work well in the American market. They also sampled a Cookie & Cream Malt balls and Honey Butter Almonds that were also delicious. All their products had a delicious taste and engaging packaging. The perfect stocking stuffer at the holidays.

Yummy LOL has the most interesting packaging

Yummy LOL candies had some of the most creative packaging in the candy category. The vibrant colors and the way that the company combines the use of candy as a toy makes this packaging all the more fun. The product was candy and a toy all in one package.

The quality of the candy is very good. The flavors of the candy have a high level of sweetness and I notice sometimes that the Asian made candies have a more intense flavor than their American counterparts. I think it is the use of different fruit flavors being used and the way these taste.

Sappe Products

https://www.sappe.com/en/

In the Thailand Pavilion, the Sappe products had the top beverage of the show. I have not tasted such refreshing sodas in a long time with such unique flavors. The use of unusual fruits and things like rose petal gave the sodas a bite and a flavor that I had never had before. I loved the Aloe Vera sodas, the Mogu Mogu beverages but the standout of their products was these floral Keaf sodas that were so refreshing and had such a bite to them that they were the perfect accompaniment with any spicy dish.

Keaf Sodas have an amazing and zesty taste to them

The Keaf sodas Relaxing Mood, Day Dreamer and Romantic Date Night flavors when well chilled have refreshing flavor due to all natural ingredients and just the way the tastes combine together. These sodas will not be on the market until next year but should be a huge hit in the specialty soda category. Their sodas were the best at the food show.

Of the American made products that I was most impressed with I have talked about in previous blogs on the food show such as Wein-Chuan Chinese Dim Sum products which are such high quality and taste homemade like they are made in the restaurant. Another was Goodie Girl cookies with their packaging and cookie flavors almost mimic Girl Scout cookies. I have found the high quality and consistency and packaging to be excellent.

Goodie Girl Cookies

Goodie Girl Cookies I have mentioned in past blogs as being a high quality brand of cookies and crackers. These delightful treats remind me of a version of Girl Scout cookies and even the Rep told me everyone gets confused by them. Even the packaging and flavors of the cookies are very similar to the latest versions of the scouts cookies.

The best part about Goodie Girl cookies is that you do not have to wait until once a year to buy them. Their Birthday Cake cookies have a creamy sweetness to them and the Fudge Stripped are a crisp sweet cookie and both can satisfy any sweet tooth.

I spent a lot of time visiting the Wei-Chuan booth at the show during meal times to sample all their products and I highly recommend the whole assortment.

The Wei-Chuan products of Dumplings and Spring rolls

https://www.weichuanusa.com/en/frozen-foods.html

Wei-Chuan is another American based company that makes high quality Chinese-American Dim Sum products. They were sampling two types of dumplings, the Chicken and the Pork along with their delightful crisp Spring rolls. I have always been impressed by the quality and taste of their appetizers. They are a product that are restaurant quality and you would have thought they were made in front of you.

A new standout product that I thought was fun and had a lot of promise was Sweetapolita, a specialty sprinkle set for kid’s parties.

Sweetapolita packaging of their specialty sprinkles for children’s birthday parties I think would be a huge hit with adults as well.

https://sweetapolita.com/

When I talked with the founder of the company, she said that when she used to have parties for her kids and said the best part of the party is when the kids had their own toppings. She said she created the product because she found that kids loved sprinkles and the creativity of decorating their own cakes. She found no product that fulfilled the need the way she wanted it so she imagined her own line and that was how she created her brand.

After the first day of the show, I had covered the whole first floor which is like walking four football fields of food. The SFA sponsored on the first night of the show the ‘Five Boro Block Party’ for all the attendees of the show. I was so stuffed from all the sampling that I had been doing at the show that I had no appetite whatsoever. There was a series of food trucks offering complimentary to all the vendors and attendees’ things like tacos, quesadillas, hot dogs and ice cream. Of all the times that something like this was free.

The Five Boro Block Party at the end of the first night of the show

They gave the attendees who wanted to have something to eat a generous sample of the different ethnic foods. Even though everything looked and smelled delicious, all I could manage after a day of sampling foods was a soft serve ice cream cone with a cherry dipped topping.

The variety of food trucks made for a nice light meal

This gave attendees a chance to socialize after the first long day of the show. They had a great DJ at the food truck festival and an actress walking around as the Statue of Liberty on stilts doing photo ops with all the guests. I thought that was fun evening and stayed for bit before I dragged myself back to Port Authority.

The Statue of Liberty who walked around the show greeting guests

I was so tired and stuffed with food that leaving early was no problem for me. So many of my friends imply that it must be so much fun to sample free food all day. It is a lot of work not to be tempted to try everything and to walk what is about four football fields of different types of food can really throw off your body. Too much of too many different things. I had to walk around the City for a bit before I went home that first day of the show.

I love walking around the City during the early evening

The second day of the food show I was raring to go and started the show on the bottom level of the Jarvis Center, where parts of the show was broken down by category and by country and state not just by product, so it gave me a chance to spend some more time in the country pavilions.

The dumplings or Momo’s were a Nepali dumping that were spicer than than their Chinese counterparts

https://www.facebook.com/mothersmagicworld/

The Momo’s had a spicer flavor to them due to the chilies in the dough and meats

The selection of Momos had a fiery flavor to them and reflected the colder climate where these types of dumplings originated. They are a different twist to typical Asian food. They used different spices and were hotter than most dumplings I tried at the show.

In the Chinese pavilion, one of the most popular vendors was ACC Foods LLC. The women who worked there were making everything fresh and right in front of us.

ACC Foods out of China had some of the best quality Dim Sum at the show

https://www.facebook.com/p/ACC-Foods-LLC-100054619171853/

They had employees making fresh pork dumplings and soup dumplings as we watched and then cooking them fresh as we waited for them to come out of steamers and frying pans.

All the samples for ACC Foods were prepared right in front of us

Everything at this booth was made from scratch and then cooked and served under the heat lamps. Trust me, nothing lasted that long where food sat at this booth. The quality, consistency and taste were all excellent.

In the Taiwan Pavilion, Pocas Foods had some of the most amazing food products from the show

Pocas Foods had a fantastic display of items at the show in both the beverage and the candy categories. I was blown away by the quality of their beverages and flavors of their candies. I have not tasted products that have such a vivid taste and in such unique flavors like melon, pineapple and mango.

https://www.pocas.com/

The Tik Tok beverages to me were some of the best in show at the Food Show. Not only were each of the flavors I tried delicious, but each had small pieces of gelatin inside the bottles to add another sweet treat to each beverage. These were made in Vietnam.

Their freeze-dried candy was so intensely sweet and crunchy. Such a delicious and unusual candy and with each bite it seems to get sweeter. I loved crunching on these and they are addictive.

Another excellent spread that I had tasted was by Trai foods. This brand of sauces were fiery and flavorful.

The delicious and punchy sauces by Tari Foods.

https://tarisauce.us/

Their sauces had amazing taste. They gave me a sample of the Amarillo Pepper to take home and delicious hot sauce added a nice kick to chicken and hot dogs.

There were several small batch snack makers I met in the Innovation and New Products Pavilion on my last day of the show. The popcorn from Little Lad’s was delicious and had flavors that I did not see in the more commercial brands.

Little Lads is a high quality product

The representative from Little Lad’s was so impressed by my comments of his product that he sent me home with a big bag of his Sea Salt & Olive Oil Popcorn which was a delight. I loved the subtle flavor of the popcorn and their was a nice saltiness to it.

Another unique and delicious snack were the Caulipuffs snacks. These puffed snacks were made with dried cauliflower flour and then air puffed into a type of ‘doodle’ snack.

Caulipuffs are snacks made from cauliflower

https://caulipuffs.com/

Caulipuffs were a big surprise to me at the Food Show and one of the most delicious snacks. Not only were they lighter than most of the snack foods I sampled but they were flavored so nicely. Both the honey barbecue and the white cheddar had a rich flavor and the had a nice crunch in every bite.

The Jaju Pierogi had delicious fillings and great flavor

https://www.jajupierogi.com/

I had tried a variety of pierogi at the show, but the brand Jaju stood out the most. These small batch dumplings had a variety of fillings, and the Sweet Potato with the Caramelized Onions had a sweet and savory flavor in every bite. They were also the perfect size for a side dish or a snack and cooked up well.

There were many frozen and fresh pizzas that I sampled at the Food Show but PiOOa Pizza stood out not just for the quality and taste but for the ethical stance they took in the company.

PiOOa Pizza

PiOOa pizza frozen pizzas stood out not just for their delicious flavor and consistency in the crust but the owner is deaf, and the company gives opportunities for those who are deaf employment in the company. The staff here works together to create these wonderful frozen pizzas.

One of the friendliest vendors I met were the Mother/Daughter team at Miss Hannah’s Gourmet Popcorn.

The mother/ daughter team behind Miss Hannah’s Gourmet Popcorn

https://www.misshannahspopcorn.com/

One of the surprising popcorn snacks I sampled was in the New Products Pavilion were the deliciously sweet Miss Hannah’s Tutti Frutti and Caramel Popcorn. Made in small batches by hand it is right now only available online. This decadent popcorn tastes like each individual popped kernel was coated individually with a touch of sweetness in every bite. It’s delicious taste and simple but fun packaging will make a wonderful gift or host present.

UpTop Candies are truly out of this world

The candy from UpTop Treats was very unique both in packaging, taste and in the logo. I thought this was a great product for children especially ones who were interested in the Space Age. The candies were freezes dried fruits that were sweet and crunchy and were the perfect snack for kids. Even this big kid (me), was impressed by the flavor and quality as well as the portion size of the product.

I loved the logo and the little space creature they created for the candy. I told the vendor that these would wonderful to sell in the Natural History and Children’s Museums. This is their get selling point. She had not even thought of that angle for the product. I also liked the little stuffed animal the had and said it was another good selling point.

O Sole Mio Prepared entrees

https://www.osolemio.ca/product-category/frozen-prepared-meals/individual-portion/

On my last day of the show, the vendors were trying to get rid of their samples because no one wants to travel home with boxes of samples. The vendor from O Sole Mio was explaining his product to me that it was a refrigerated, fully prepared meal that just needed to be unwrapped, mixed in the enclosed container and then microwaved and served. He offered me two samples and I foolishly took only one. It was delicious and easy to prepare.

The packaging and the dinner I prepared at home

The product was delicious and so easy to to put together. Each part of the entree, the sauce, grilled chicken and the pasta were fully prepared and in their own individual bags. I just put them into the microwaveable container, mixed it up and cooked it for four minutes and dinner was done.

The quality of the entree was excellent and it had a nice creamy rich flavor

I thought the product was a nice alternative to these expensive food kits and if you are in a rush or tired after a long day at work, this is a very nice alternative to eating out.

The best for last was a vendor that I have featured a few times before in my blogs on the Food Show. Featured in the Korean Pavilion, Melona frozen desserts. These were excellent and some of the best frozen ice pops and novelties of the show. These fruit purée ice pops are the best at the Food Show but hard to find at the supermarkets.

Melona Frozen Products

https://enjoymelona.com/

They have about a dozen different flavors of ice pops and not your typical flavors. Melona frozen foods have some of the most original and creative flavors like honeydew melon, mango, watermelon, banana and green tea. Their ice cream products, some in the shape of fish which has symbolism in Korea, were filled with vanilla ice cream and fruit syrup wrapped in a sweet rice flower dough. Not just beautiful to look at but delicious in taste.

Melona’s version of an ice cream sandwich filled with Vanilla ice cream and sweet strawberry syrup

The selection of frozen treats by Melona products put other ice cream companies to shame with their unique flavors, beautiful packaging and delicious taste. I had to keep coming back to their booth just to try all the flavors all three days of the show. They could not have been more generous with their samples and their representatives encouraged you to try more.

The New York Fancy Food show had many other quality products to sample and purchase for stores but these were the products that really stood out to me in taste, flavor, packaging and originality in the product itself. If I owned a grocery store, these are the products that I would stock and recommend to customers. In the three days I attended the show, these were my set of winners. They were wonderful in every way.

I will be looking for them in grocery stores soon. I look forward again to the Fancy Food Show in 2025.

Chatham Township Historical Society/Red Brick Schoolhouse Museum 24 Southern Boulevard Chatham, NJ 07928

The Red Schoolhouse Museum has lots to see and do on its two floors.

The museum has an extensive toy display on the first floor of the museum.

Dover Grill 240 Route 46 East Dover, NJ 07801

What’s better after a long road trip than a burger and fries with an icy Coke? The food at Dover Grill is delicious!

Dover Dairy Maid 240 Route 46 East Dover, NJ 07801

Dover Dairy Maid at 240 Route 46 East in Dover, NJ

The Butterscotch Sunday I enjoyed so much!

Day Three Hundred and Sixteen Exploring Coney Island and watching the Nathan’s Hot Dog Eating Contest July 4th, 2024 (Again July 4th, 2025)

I have been coming to Coney Island since 1970 and I have to say that it is still has a grittiness to it even while other parts of Brooklyn have been under hyper gentrification. There may be lots of building going on around the amusement area but still there is a feeling of edginess to it around each corner and as you leave Surf Avenue to walk the side streets.

Arriving in Coney Island in the morning for the Nathan’s Hot Dog Eating Contest

I had to leave the house early to take the bus and then the subway to Coney Island. The internet said that the Women’s Contest started at 10:30am and I wanted to get in the viewing area before that. Thank God, the City was quiet and both the bus and subway were right there when I needed them. Talk about timing.

I lucked out for the hot dog eating contest. I thought it was going to be cloudy all day and it ended up being a very sunny and pleasant morning when I got there. The crowds had not been that big when I arrived so I got a good spot near the stage that was perfect for taking pictures. The only problem was the women’s contest did not start until 11:00am. The entertainment was very good and kept the crowd engaged.

The band kept everyone pumped before the contest began:

I got close to the stage and being tall I was still able to get great pictures and view the contest up close. Trust me when I say that people take this contest very seriously and there is a lot of pomp and circumstance to all of this. Last year’s female winner, Miki Sudo, the woman from Japan and the 2021 winner all looked very determined to win this year. These woman had looks on their faces (and I mean all of them as I was close enough to all of them when they announced their names) that they were there to win!

Nathan’s was the place to be on the 4th of July

The MC for Nathan’s, George Shea, has been doing this for a long time and I could tell took this contest just as seriously as the contestants. He was just as engaged with the crowd as he was with the contestants and made sure between the entertainers as well as the contestants had a good time.

The MC for the afternoon George Shea

The MC had started out by saying that Joey Chestnut would not be coming this year because of endorsement he made with an all natural vegetarian hot dog and he did not want a conflict. I read later that you as a contestant must pledge their support to Nathan’s Hot Dogs, which I believe is true. It also opened the contest to a new winner which made the Men’s Division so much more exciting.

After the speeches, announcements and entertainment were over, it was time to eat and they started the Women’s Division first. Most of these women were pretty thin and well-built in their category and most were competitive eaters. Some had won numerous contests that I could never win let alone contemplate ever participating in. What it could do to your health would worry me but that did not take the fun out of the contest.

We started the contest with the National Anthem and these two annoying hot dog mascots who were always in the way of our shots.

Then the Bugaboos came out to perform and work he crowds before the women made their entrance

Video on their performance:

Then the women came out and their names were announced like prize fighters coming into battle. Some of these women were serious eating champions of things like Mac and cheese and strawberry shortcake. I was impressed as I could never do that.

The women’s Division before the start of the contest

There was a lot of anticipation between the returning champion, Miki Sudo, the Japanese competitor and the 2021 champion. This was serious competition. The top three competitors were going to go at it.

Then they were off when the count down hit one

Video on the start of the competition:

And they ate

And they ate

And they ate

And they ate

The Ladies finishing up the competition

The returning champion thrilled to have won the title again

Reining Champion, Miki Sudo, ate a record 51 hot dogs to keep the Women’s Division title

Winner Miki Sudo giving the crowd a welcoming speech on their support

The women showing great sportsmanship at the end of the contest holding their trophies and the pink belts

Then it was time for the Lemonade Chugging Contest. There was one guy who was the raining champion and he was about 400 pounds. I do not know how anyone could beat him.

The men and women of the Lemonade Chugging contest

Video on the Contest:

Then they were off and running. After it was over one poor guy got so sick they had to delay the men’s competition just to clean up. So they brought back the entertainment and we were delayed by twenty minutes. Once they were cleaned up and reset, they brought out the Men’s competitors like the ladies. Who won what eating contests in the past and the ranks they fell in the world competitions were announced as they entered the stage area.

I have never heard of most of these competitions but these guys won dumpling, mac and cheese, hot peppers and chicken wings like pros. They were also announced like prize fighters and again almost all these guys were in excellent shape.

The Men’s Division getting started

Then the countdown

Then they were off and devouring

And they ate

And they ate

The video of the finish of the contest:

It was almost a photo finish how it went back and forth in this contest but only one winner prevailed and that was Patrick Bertoletti with 58 hot dogs. The other guys put up the battle but he just steamrolled ahead of the competition.

The winner Patrick Bertoletti holding the flag

The proud winner after the interview holding the ‘Mustard Belt’

After the competition was over, Nathan’s was mobbed with people ready to eat their own hot dogs and I did not feel like dealing with that crowd, so I waited until the crowds died down. I went to walk around the amusement park area and see what was going on there. The place was mobbed with people after the contest and people still arriving to Coney Island by subway.

The crowds on the Midway by Deno’s Wonder Wheel Amusement Park

People still walked around with their foam Nathan’s hats on around Coney Island

I waited on lunch and took a tour around the amusement area which was mobbed after the contest. Deno’s had lines I had not seen before and families waited patiently to get on the Wonder Wheel and into the Haunted Mansion.

This was just a small glimpse of the growing lines at Deno’s Wonder Wheel Amusement Park at 3059 West 12th Street

https://www.denoswonderwheel.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60827-d565041-Reviews-Deno_s_Wonder_Wheel_Amusement_Park-Brooklyn_New_York.html

What amazed me was the amount of tourists versus the locals that I saw and heard in the crowds. It is nice to see the tourists rediscover Coney Island again. Even walking along the Midway with the new Luna Park in the distance, it still has that rough feel about it. I sometimes wish they would do more with Surf Avenue as it really does look unattractive. Nothing like the pictures from 1910 when the amusement area was at its peak in Coney Island innovation.

I then made my way to Luna Park, which was a little quieter than Deno’s. I keep thinking is because Deno’s has more adult rides where Luna Park is more geared to kids and families. The space they have in both parks limits both the types of rides they offer and how far they can expand.

We discovered that when my graduate school paper in Customer Relations from NYU on Luna Park discussed these challenges and those of the ‘Harvest Fest’ Halloween event and the first ‘Frost Fest’ during Christmas time. Our group visited the park to experience what Luna Park had to offer:

The Paper:

The PowerPoint on the project:

Walking around Luna Park the rides were not full in the early afternoon

Walking around Luna Park in the early afternoon

A view of both Deno’s and Luna Park from the Midway at Luna Park

https://lunaparknyc.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60827-d1796964-Reviews-Luna_Park_in_Coney_Island-Brooklyn_New_York.html

After taking a walk through both parks and dodging the crowds, I took a walk on the Boardwalk and headed to the aquarium before lunch. I love the characters on the Boardwalk. People were doing everything from barbecuing and selling food to singing, playing disco and salsa music and dancing to showing off their giant snakes (ugh). Everyone was having such a good time on the 4th of July and it showed.

There is nothing like the Coney Island boardwalk

The beach was busy but not as packed as I thought it would be on the 4th of July. I remember seeing pictures of the beach in the 40’s after WWII and there was no place to move. There are some old movies of what Coney Island was like in the 1940’s and 50’s where you could not move on the beach. Even at the turn of the last century with work rules changing, ocean bathing became a new nation phenomenon even in 1904 (how bathing suits have changed!):

Dancing the “Cake Walk” on the beaches of Coney Island

The Coney Island beach started it all. Sun bathing got its start on this beach

The sign welcoming you to Coney Island Beach

https://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/coney-island-beach-and-boardwalk

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60827-d106173-Reviews-Coney_Island-Brooklyn_New_York.html

Not as busy as I would have thought but the day had not started yet

I headed over to the New York Aquarium for the afternoon. I wanted to see the seal show and walk around the shark tanks again. The aquarium like the rest of the boardwalk was really busy but this was filled with families escaping the heat of the beach and the boardwalk with airconditioned buildings and nautical displays.

The New York Aquarium at 602 Surf Avenue has gotten much better since Hurricane Sandy. The aquarium has upgraded itself since the flood

https://nyaquarium.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60827-d107414-Reviews-New_York_Aquarium-Brooklyn_New_York.html

The New York Aquarium is one of the reasons why I joined the Wildlife Conservatory again. I love the seal shows and walking around the ‘Spineless’ exhibition and watching the jellyfish move around. This aquarium is so different in feel than the Jenkinson Aquarium on my recent visit to Point Pleasant. Just a different set up and way to approach the animals. The first part of the aquarium you enter is the coral reef displays.

The coral reef exhibition at the aquarium shows what a healthy reef should look like in the ocean

The fish passing by in the reef

I got there as the seal show was starting. The seals in the show were both born at the aquarium so they only know life in captivity. Sometimes I think they do have a bit of a New York attitude.

The Seal Show at the New York Aquarium

The show was mobbed with people watching the seals do all sorts of tricks but I could see very disciplined animals just having fun with the crowd. It also gives them a bigger tank to move around in.

The seals know when to ham it up

The seals that live at the aquarium were born here and are native New Yorkers

The seal and his trainer welcoming the crowd

Good communication

The seals perform like pros and react beautifully with their human trainers. There seems to be a real bond here

I think it is an excellent way for humans to understand other mammals

This is one of the best parts of the aquarium to experience on a nice day. The breezes are fantastic, the seals are so talented and the staff take such good care of not just mammals but the performance area, making it comfortable for everyone. You have to see the show at least once.

The view of the aquarium and beach from the top of the theater

Then it was time to visit the Shark Tank exhibition which is the newest part of the aquarium and the most impressive display of wildlife.

The Shark exhibition

I love walking through the Shark halls as you feel like you are in an underwater adventure. The first time I had experienced this was when I was on Sentosa Island in Singapore at their aquarium and that feeling of exploring the deep by walking through it. You can see the sharks swimming on top of you. I am glad they created the same sort of tanks that you can walk through to experience the deep from the bottom looking up.

Experiencing life under water

The thrill of seeing a shark on top of you at a safe distance is a great experience. There is underwater magic going on here.

The underwater magic of the sea

When I arrived at the main tank, that is when I could see the sharks and stingrays up close along with all the colorful fish.

Seeing one of the baby sharks up close

The sharks interacting with the other fish in the tank

The school of sharks in front of us

I walked around the aquarium looking at the penguins home, the coral reef tanks and the ‘Spineless’ tanks with all the unusual jellyfish swimming around.

The jellyfish are so elegant swimming around

They are the most beautiful creature up close but don’t get near those tentacles in real life.

The penguins were milling around themselves in their home as they waited for their feeding. They standed direct and the group of them looked like they knew what time it was for them.

The Penguin home at the aquarium

What I thought was interesting and caught my attention was the nautical artwork the was displayed all over the grounds. The works created by ‘Washed Ashore’, were made of plastic products found in the ocean. It really does show the consciousness we should show to our bodies of water and what we throw into them.

The Angus the Longhorn Fish sculpture sign

The Angus the Longhorn Fish sculpture

Choppers the Tiger Shark sign

The Choppers the Tiger Shark sculpture

The Nora the Salmon sculpture sign

The Nora the Salmon sculpture

These were some of the many sculptures that were dotted around the aquarium. I thought they brought light to how much plastic there is currently in the ocean. I took one tour around the aquarium and then it was back to Nathan’s for a late lunch. I thought at this point the lines would be slowing down. It was still busy even by 3:00pm.

Surf Avenue in the mid afternoon and things are changing fast here

The lines never stopped at Nathan’s at Surf Avenue. The contest ended at 1:00pm but lines on both sides of the restaurant were out the door and when I got in line there were literally thirty people behind me. They were fully staffed and that line went quickly. I was ordered and eating my lunch within ten minutes. The staff worked really hard that day and they got all the customers through the lines very quickly.

The lines at Nathan’s at 1310 Surf Avenue in Coney Island on the 4th of July seemed endless

https://nathansfranks.sfdbrands.com/en-us/about/

My TripAdvisor review:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60827-d458011-Reviews-Nathan_s_Famous-Brooklyn_New_York.html?m=19905

I love going to Nathan’s. I have been eating here since my first trip here with my cousins in 1974. I still remember what I ordered then, a slice of pizza and a Coke. Since then it has been a hot dog, a medium fries and a Coke.

My Nathan’s meal when visiting Coney Island

I love the crispness of the garlicky hot dog and the crispness of the fries. The fries here are legendary and I remember them winning awards in the 1970’s.

The best lunch on the 4th of July

No wonder people eat these hot dogs by the dozen

The fries are amazing

Williams Candy next door has been a Coney Island institution for years and their windows are filled with all sorts of candy apples and marshmallow treats on a stick.

The crowds kept coming at Nathan’s

What I like about Williams Candy is the assortment and the smells of cotton candy, popcorn and ice cream when you walk in the door.

William Candy at 1318 Surf Avenue

https://www.candytreats.com/

My TripAdvisor review:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d3160521-Reviews-William_s_Candy_Shop-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

My review on LittleShoponMainStreet@Wordpress.com:

https://wordpress.com/stats/post/748/littleshoponmainstreet.wordpress.com

The windows filled with treats at Williams Candy

I was eyeing the candy coated marshmallows but when I realized that the other marshmallows were dipped in the candy coating and then rolled in the sprinkles, I chose the red, white and blue one.

The Marshmallow on a stick at Williams Candy

I can’t tell you how good this is when you bite into it. Between all the sprinkles packed on top and the crunchy candy coating was sugar heaven.

You can’t miss this sugary treat. What a great patriotic dessert!

I now had to work all this off so I went to tour the boardwalk and decided to walk down to Seagate at the end of it. It was an interesting walk. Everything was going on that afternoon. Families were out barbecuing, disco dancing, line dancing and dancing to salsa music. There was a lot of energy on that Boardwalk.

The Boardwalk was jammed that day

With all the talk on the revival of Coney Island, I passed the old parachute jump and it still looks it is going to need a lot of work in the future.

The parachute jump

The funny thing about Coney Island is that it is an island of contrasts. On one hand there is a lot of building going on in the central part of the island with luxury housing being built around the baseball field (where Steeplechase Park once existed) and then you have some of the most dangerous public housing in the City just two blocks west of that. Then at the very end is Seagate, a gated community that seems to keep to itself on the other side of the fence.

I walked to the end of the Boardwalk and back watching families barbecue, dance and having a good time. By the time I got back to the amusement section of the island both the aquarium and the museum were both closed, Nathan’s was still packed and this section of the Boardwalk got busier as people were leaving the beach and wanting to get dinner.

All that walking was making me hungry again as it was getting closer to dinner time. Both Gargiulo’s Italian Restaurant and Totonno’s Pizzeria were both closed for the day and the rest of the restaurants on the Boardwalk were either packed or everything was deep fried and I did not want that after my meal at Nathan’s for lunch so I decided to head back to Manhattan.

I did not know if there would be fireworks on the beach that evening but with the clouds rolling in and the threat of rain, I did not want to get caught in it. The subways were mobbed and the bulk of the people were illegally walking through the emergency doors. I swear nothing changes. No one was watching what people were doing.

When I got back to Manhattan, I did not want to run around looking for a place for a quick dinner. I remembered that there were a few Chinese restaurants by the Port Authority and I stopped at Awesum Dim Sum at 612 Eighth Avenue for quick dinner before I left for home. The restaurant was surprisingly busy for food you don’t equate with the 4th of July.

Awesum Dim Sum at 612 Eighth Avenue

https://awesumdimsum.us/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d25269421-Reviews-Awesum_Dim_Sum-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

I love the selection of Dim Sum at the restaurant and ordered a small dinner for myself before I left the City. I had to have the Bacon Wrapped Fried Shrimp, which I was craving, the Scallion Pancakes and the Cream filled buns for dessert. Everything was cooked to order, fresh and was excellent (see TripAdvisor review).

Dinner that night at Awesum Dim Sum, Bacon Wrapped Fried Shrimp, Scallion Pancakes and the Cream Filled Buns

It was a nice change from barbecue foods and since I already had a hot dog for lunch, I thought this would make a great dinner. It was just enough and made the perfect meal. Then I was on my way home. Their Fried Shrimp with Bacon is excellent. The shrimp mixture has a nice sweetness to with the contrasts of the smokiness of the bacon.

The Fried Shrimp with Bacon

The Scallion Pancakes were crisp and had a nice taste especially with the dipping sauce.

The Scallion Pancakes

The Cream Buns were the perfect way to end the meal. They were crisp and sweet on the outside because of the rice dough and rich and creamy on the inside. I thought it was a nice change and a great way to end the day.

The Cream Filled Buns

It really was a nice 4th of July and I really enjoyed my day in Coney Island. I have to admit that the neighborhood is rough when you leave the beach area but like the rest of the City, you just need to watch were you walk and stick to the Boardwalk area, you should be fine. The Nathan’s Hot Dog Eating Contest is something everyone should experience once.

Happy 4th of July!

Places to Visit in Coney Island:

Coney Island Boardwalk

https://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/coney-island-beach-and-boardwalk

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60827-d106173-Reviews-Coney_Island-Brooklyn_New_York.html

New York Aquarium

602 Surf Avenue

Brooklyn, NY 11224

(718) 265-3474

http://www.nyaquarium.com

https://nyaquarium.com/

Open: Sunday & Saturday 10:00am-5:30pm/Monday-Friday 10:00am-5:00pm

Fee: Adults $25.00/Children $20.00/Seniors $27.00 (see their website for more details on pricing and times)

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60827-d107414-Reviews-New_York_Aquarium-Brooklyn_New_York.html?m=19905

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/visitingamuseum.com/3619

The Coney Island Museum

1208 Surf Avenue

Brooklyn, NY  11224

(718) 372-5159

Open:

Summer: (June-Labor Day Weekend) Monday- Saturday 12:00pm-6:00pm/ Sunday 2:00pm-6:00pm

Fall/Winter/Spring: (September-May) Monday-Saturday 12:00pm-6:00pm/Sunday 2:00pm-6:00pm

Admission: $5.00 Adults/Members Free/Residents, Seniors & Children under 12 $3.00

http://www.coneyisland.com

https://www.coneyisland.com/event/coney-island-museum

TripAdvisor Review:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60827-d555621-Reviews-The_Coney_Island_Museum-Brooklyn_New_York.html?m=19905

My review on VisitingaMuseum.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/visitingamuseum.com/1978

Luna Park

1000 Surf Avenue

Brooklyn, NY 11224

(718) 373-5862

https://lunaparknyc.com/

Open: Sunday 11:00am-11:00pm/Monday 11:00am-10:00pm/Tuesday 10:30am-11:00pm/Wednesday 11:00am-12:00am/Thursday 10:00am-12:00am/Friday 11:00am-12:00am/Saturday 11:00am-12:00am (seasonal)

Check website for prices

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60827-d1796964-Reviews-Luna_Park_in_Coney_Island-Brooklyn_New_York.html

Deno’s Wonder Wheel Park

3059 West 12th Street

Brooklyn, NY 11224

(718) 372-2592

https://www.denoswonderwheel.com/

Open: Sunday 12:00pm-11:00pm/Monday-Wednesday 12:00am-10:00pm/Thursday 12:00pm-11:00pm (Seasonal)

Check website for prices

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60827-d565041-Reviews-Deno_s_Wonder_Wheel_Amusement_Park-Brooklyn_New_York.html

Places to Eat:

Nathan’s Coney Island

1310 Surf Avenue

Brooklyn, NY 11224

https://nathansfranks.sfdbrands.com/en-us/about/

Open: Sunday-Thursday 10:00am-11:00pm/Friday and Saturday 10:00am-12:00am

My TripAdvisor review:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60827-d458011-Reviews-Nathan_s_Famous-Brooklyn_New_York.html?m=19905

Williams Candy

1318 Surf Avenue

Brooklyn, NY  11224

(718) 372-0302

Open: Sunday-Thursday 10:00am-11:00pm/Friday and Saturday 10:00am-12:00am

https://candytreats.com/

https://www.facebook.com/peteclams/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d3160521-Reviews-William_s_Candy_Shop-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

My review on LittleShoponMainStreet@Wordpress.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/littleshoponmainstreet.wordpress.com/748

Awesum Dim Sum

612 Eighth Avenue

New York, NY 10018

(212) 520-8099

https://awesumdimsum.us/

Open: Sunday 9:30am-8:30pm/Monday-Friday 8:00am-8:30pm/Saturday 9:30am-8:30pm

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d25269421-Reviews-Awesum_Dim_Sum-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

My review on DiningonaShoeStringinNYC@Wordpress.com:

https://wordpress.com/post/diningonashoestringinnyc.wordpress.com/1898

Returned on July 4th, 2025:

I had to plan my trip back to Coney Island like D-Day to see the contest again. I had been on the Island recently for the Mermaid Parade and could not believe how fast the 4th of July weekend arrived.

I was so tired from being in the City the day before trying to finish walking Chelsea, going to one of my fellow volunteers Memorial Services at Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen and then a Jazz Night at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden. That on top of posting grades for class, I was pooped from all the running around.

I got off to a late start that morning still tired from running around Brooklyn the night before. By the time I caught the bus at 8:00am and got into the City just before 9:00am, I knew I was behind schedule.

I had planned on having breakfast on 23rd Street at a place I liked but there was not enough time. So I stopped at Villa Pizza inside the Port Authority for a breakfast Stromboli.

Villa Pizza inside the Port Authority

The assortment of Breakfast Stromboli

The breakfast items at a pizzeria

For a chain pizzeria inside a bus terminal, breakfast here was not bad. I had always seen the Breakfast Strombolis in the case and wondered what they tasted like.

My breakfast the Bacon, Egg and Cheese Stromboli with a freshly squeezed orange juice

The Bacon, Egg and Cheese Stromboli

The Breakfast Stromboli

The selection of both breakfast and lunch dishes at Villa Pizza inside

After breakfast was finished I took the Q back down to Coney Island. The subway was packed with people heading to the shore. People got off at all the beach spots and when I got into Stilwell Avenue, Nathan’s was already packed with people trying to get to the stage area. I ended up standing outside the press stage with an ‘Exit’ sign blocking my views of the screen (that’s why there is an exit sign in all of my pictures and videos).

Arriving at Nathan’s as the band was performing

Nathan’s has been in this spot since the 1920’s

The band that had entertained last year

The brass band playing before the contest

The band really got the audience fired up and with some local dance groups performing and then the ‘Star Spangled Banner’ performed, it was time for the contest to begin.

First was the Ladies competition

Miki Suto was defending her crown

She won her record 11th belt

After a series of entertainment, the Men’s Eating Contest started. The crowd went wild when they announced Joey Chestnut’s name. The place went wild.

The crowd was ten times what it was when I got there

The excitement built before the contest

The crowd was all for Joey Chestnut

Then the man of the hour got on stage

The excitement building before the contest

The crowd going crazy during the contest

The crowd was going crazy during the competition

The contest that I could from behind the bleachers

The man of the hour Joey Chestnut won the contest with 70.5 hot dogs. Last year’s winner came in second with 53. Both the Men’s and Women’s winners did not come close to their records. It was not like last year but it still was an exciting contest.

The celebration after the contest was over for the 4th of July

After the contest was over and the winners took their pictures, I wondered around Coney Island and explored the Boardwalk and amusement areas.

There is such an energy in Coney Island on the 4th of July

Walking through Deno’s Wonder Wheel Park

Walking through Deno’s Wonder Wheel Park

The famous Wonder Wheel

The Spook A Rama, my first ride on Coney Island as a kid

The Boardwalk on the 4th of July afternoon

Looking down the Boardwalk from the Aquarium

The beach by the Aquarium

I decided to go to the NY Aquarium before lunch. Every restaurant was a line so I figured to come here first.

I made I in time to see the Sea Lion Show

The Sea Lion Show

The second group of sea lions

The end of the sea lion show

After the Sea Lion Show, I toured the Shark Tanks and walked around the exhibition.

The Shark exhibition

The Shark exhibition

The underwater tanks

After a nice walk around the Aquarium, I was getting hungry and decided on a late lunch at Nathan’s. I figured that the lines would be down at this point and when I got there, it was only a ten minute wait to order.

Arriving back at Nathan’s Famous for lunch

My favorite lunch at Nathan’s, a plain hot dog, medium fries and a Coke

The taste has not changed in fifty years

Yum!

Lunch at Nathan’s is always an experience. You have to share the tables outside when it is busy and you never know who you will be sitting next to for lunch. Some woman parked herself at the table and asked if she could eat with me. I guess I looked safe.

After lunch, I took one last tour around the Boardwalk and Surf Avenue and realized I want to put my feet in the water.

Off went the shoes as I walked along the beach

Even though the beach was crowded with families, it was not the crowds that I saw in old pictures when thousands of people would pack the shore on a summer weekend or holiday. Still to walk these iconic beaches on the 4th of July is quite the experience.

The Coney Island beach on July 4th

I made my way back to the subway and walked along Surf Avenue. It is amazing to see the changes to this area in the last 100 years.

Passing Nathan’s again across from the subway

The sign for the hot dog eating contest at Nathan’s

The Mermaid Parade sign from two weeks ago

It really is a fun experience and you have to add the Hot Dog Eating contest to the bucket of things to experience when you are in New York City.

Happy 4th of July, 2025!

Top That! Donut 210 Ocean Avenue North Point Pleasant Beach, NJ 08742

What could beat these breakfast treats!

Day Three Hundred and Thirteen Walking the borders of Union Square from Fifth Avenue to Irving Place from 14th to 20th Streets June 16th and 17th, 2024

I finally got into Union Square and at a nice time of the year. The park was packed with people sunning themselves, reading and enjoying the sunshine. The Farmers Market was in full swing and offered so many wonderful things for sale.

What a beautiful day to start the walk in Union Square Park

https://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/union-square-park

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60763-d136291-Reviews-Union_Square-New_York_City_New_York.html

I was able to tour the neighborhood twice in the two day period over Father’s Day Weekend once at twilight just as the sun was setting and the lights were coming on at the cafes and restaurants and then the next morning after breakfast on a clear and sunny day. The buildings took on two different personalities at different times of the day.

The first part of the walk was revisiting lower Fifth Avenue from West 20th to West 14th Streets. Again which I had just covered for my blogs on the Lower Flatiron District. Just after the Civil War to WWI, the was the Midtown Manhattan of that era with the banking and shopping districts where you still see these traces in the beauty of the buildings. From Beaux-Arts to Neo-Classical, these former headquarters buildings were meant to impress. I started my tour passing the same Fifth Avenue buildings that share the border with the Lower Flatiron District.

I passed 156 Fifth Avenue as I walked this part of the neighborhood again and admired it for its detailed stonework carving and unusual styled roof. The Presbyterian Building was built in 1893 and was designed by architect James B. Baker and was designed in the French Gothic style. It was to be used by the Presbyterian Church as their base for domestic and foreign missions and used as office space. The Panic of 1893 changed that, and they had to lease the space out (Daytonian in Manhattan).

156 Fifth Avenue

https://www.loopnet.com/Listing/156-Fifth-Ave-New-York-NY/14050649/

http://daytoninmanhattan.blogspot.com/2011/02/presbyterian-building-156-fifth-avenue.html

I then took the long walk down Fifth Avenue and all the architectural treasures it contains. This was once the core of the old ‘Midtown Manhattan’ after the Civil War and the City started its march uptown.

148 Fifth Avenue

https://streeteasy.com/building/148-5-avenue-new_york

https://www.loopnet.com/property/148-5th-ave-new-york-ny-10011/36061-08210041/

This unique office building was built in 1900 as a office building. This building is currently under renovation.

The details on 148 Fifth Avenue

The details of 148 Fifth Avenue

The next interesting building on the walk down Fifth Avenue was 119 Fifth Avenue which had just finished being renovated.

119 Fifth Avenue

https://www.propertyshark.com/mason/Property/13021/119-5-Ave-New-York-NY-10003/

https://streeteasy.com/building/119-5th-avenue-new_york

119 Fifth Avenue at the corner of East 19th Street in the Flatiron District neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City was built in 1905-06 and was designed by John H. Duncan in the neo-Renaissance style. It was built to be an annex to the Lord & Taylor department store buildings which took up most of the square block between Broadway and Fifth Avenue and East 19th and 20th Streets, being connected by bridge to two of them. After Lord & Taylor moved uptown in 1914, the building had multiple uses (Wiki).

The details of 119 Fifth Avenue

The details of 119 Fifth Avenue

One of the most impressive buildings in the neighborhood is the old Arnold Constable Store building that stretches from its Broadway entrance down the entire block on 18th Street to its Fifth Avenue entrance.

115 Fifth Avenue-Arnold Constable Department Store

https://buildingsofnewengland.com/tag/115-fifth-ave-nyc/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnold_Constable_%26_Company

https://www.realtyhop.com/building/115-5th-avenue-new-york-ny-10003

This seven-story department store building was designed by architect Griffith Thomas in 1868 for the prominent dry-goods company of Arnold Constable & Company. ‘The Palace of Trade’ as it became known as, is located stretches between Broadway and Fifth Avenue. The stunning Second Empire building is faced in marble, brick, and cast-iron, features stacked arch orders and a prominent, two-story, pavilioned mansard roof.  Arnold Constable & Co. was founded by Aaron Arnold, who opened a small dry goods store in the city in 1825 (Buildings of New England).

As the business prospered he moved into larger quarters numerous times. In 1842, James Constable, an employee, married Arnold’s daughter Henrietta and was subsequently made a partner. From this, the company was renamed Arnold Constable & Co. In its heyday, Arnold Constable & Co. was the largest dealer to the elite in New York City, supplying the latest fashions to a clientele that included the leading families in the city (Buildings of New England). 

103 Fifth Avenue

https://streeteasy.com/building/103-5-avenue-new_york

https://daytoninmanhattan.blogspot.com/2011/07/1896-beaux-arts-pierrepont-building-103.html

The building had an interesting history. The building was designed by architect Louis Korn and was designed in the Beaux-Arts design. It was completed in 1896 and it was named after Edwards Pierrepont, whose mansion had stood on the site before the construction of the building. When it opened the building was popular small publishing and mercantile companies (Dayonianinmanhattan.com).

The 103 Fifth Avenue details

103 Fifth Avenue embellishments

In between the buildings there was plaque to Levi Parsons Morton, the former Governor of New York State and the Vice-President of the United States under President Benjamin Harrison. This is where his home was located.

The plaque of the former Vice-President’s home on Fifth Avenue.

Vice-President and former New York Governor Levi Parsons Morton

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Levi_P._Morton

On the building is also the B. Shackman & Company sign for a now long gone Fifth Avenue toy business.

The B. Shackman & Company sign

https://ephemeralnewyork.wordpress.com/tag/b-shackman-co/

The B. Shackman & Company sign was for the former B. Shackman & Company novelty and toy store that was located here until the 1970’s. The store once sold all sorts of novelties and gifts (Ephemeral New York.com/Consumer Grouch).

91 Fifth Avenue

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/91-93_Fifth_Avenue#:~:text=91%2D93%20Fifth%20Avenue%20is,built%20between%201895%20and%201896.

https://www.propertyshark.com/mason/Property/12971/91-5-Ave-New-York-NY-10003/

This beautiful office building was designed by architect Louis Korn for businessmen Henry and Samuel Korn in 1896. The office building currently houses small companies (Wiki).

The details of women looking down at us on the street at 91 Fifth Avenue

The lion details on 91 Fifth Avenue.

The last building on this part of Fifth Avenue was under an extensive renovation and I was not able to get the pictures that I wanted but still you could see the details in the building around the renovations.

Looking up Fifth Avenue from 16th Street

The Kensington Building was designed by architect Samuel Sass in the Beaux-Arts design and completed in 1906. Some of the first tenants of the building was the Milton Bradley company. The building was converted into a residential building in 1996 and were designed by architect Joseph Pell Lombardi (Landmark Branding LLC).

73 Fifth Avenue

https://www.cityrealty.com/nyc/flatiron-union-square/the-kensington-73-fifth-avenue/4044

The details on 73 Fifth Avenue

This part of Fifth Avenue has kept its character all these years and now that these buildings are back in vogue because of their history and design detail, they are being refitted for modern times. These were once the headquarters of companies that are now long gone but are housing the new future companies leading us into the 21st Century.

Looking up Fifth Avenue from 15th Street and the core of the Lower Flatiron District.

West 14th Street is a Hodge podge of building types and in various conditions. COVID really hit 14th Street businesses hard and between the pandemic, urban renewal of the neighborhood and changing tastes of building types, there is only a few buildings left from the era when this was a major shopping street at the turn of the last century. This was before everything moved up to the 23rd Street and Sixth Avenue area.

Much of the block between Fifth and Sixth Avenue is in the process of being knocked down, renovated or both. Still there are some architectural gems still left on the street.

On the corner of Fifth Avenue and West 14th Street is 80 Fifth Avenue.

80 Fifth Avenue from the corner view

https://www.loopnet.com/Listing/80-Fifth-Ave-New-York-NY/4632221/

80 Fifth Avenue is an elaborately-detailed Renaissance Revival style office building that was constructed by the architecture firm of Buchman and Fox. This building was constructed in 1908 to be used as manufacturing and office space (Kates, Ariel. Off the Grid).

Seeing better detail work on the building from the West 14th Street view.

This beautiful building’s lower and upper levels feature decorative floral and geometric ornamentation, elaborate cornices, and angled bay windows on the third floor. Ornamented pilasters are found at either side of these windows, with slightly more austere middle floors and in its arched windows and elaborate ornamentation at the top story (Kates, Ariel. Off the Grid).

The beautiful detail work on 80 Fifth Avenue.

The building’s history has a long past of companies that have worked in these offices but the most prominent had been the creation of the gay organization, The National Gay Task Force. Among the Task Force’s accomplishments during the time it was located at 80 Fifth Avenue included getting the American Psychiatric Association to end its classification of homosexuality as a mental illness; getting the federal government to end its ban on employing gay or lesbian people in any federal agencies (Kates, Ariel. Off the Grid).

When I turned to the corner and walked down East 14th Street, I know seeing developers attempt to rid Union Square of its once seedy past. As I pass the park itself, I still remember the days when this was a major drug haven, a major methadone clinic was located here and sensible people stayed far away from Union Square Park. It took Danny Meyers and the creation of Union Square Cafe in 1985 at 101 East 19th Street and then the closing of the methadone clinic to change all that. The popularity of the Farmers Market and the renovation of the park in the late 1980’s changed the complexity of the neighborhood.

The original Union Square Cafe at 21 East 16th Street

https://www.unionsquarecafe.com/about/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d457829-Reviews-Union_Square_Cafe-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

My father and I on Father’s Day at the original Union Square Cafe for lunch in early 2000’s

There were also a series of buildings around the square that were knocked down and new buildings built in their place most notably the old S. Klein on the Square building replaced by a new office building, a branch of NYU opening on the southern end of the park and the Zeckendorf Towers buildings at One Union Square changed the who complexity of Union Square into a desirable neighborhood. In the 21st Century, it is now becoming a trendy neighborhood catering to the tech industry.

Even more changes are on there way:

https://www.curbed.com/2021/01/union-square-park-partnership-plan.html

As I crossed Fifth Avenue to West 14th Street towards Union Square I remembered that this was the most southern part of the old Ladies Shopping District before the Civil War. It had been the theater district as well with the Academy of Music closer to Irving Street. After the Civil War, the shopping and theater district moved uptown towards 23rd Street, then to 34th Street and then ending at 42nd Street.

Between Fifth Avenue and Broadway along the southern border of Union Square, there is not much left of that shopping district. Many of the older buildings had been knocked down in the early 1900’s for new stores and since then much of the non-landmarked buildings were again knocked down in the early 1980’s to improve the district. S. Klein stood empty from 1975, when it closed for business to 1983 when it finally was knocked down for the Zeckendorf Towers and that changed the district forever (Wiki).

Still when I walked from Fifth Avenue to Union Square there was one building that stood out amongst all the new late 20th buildings on 14th Street and that was 22-26 East 14th Street.

This impressive building at 22-26 East 14th Street built along the former Ladies Shopping Mile was once meant to impress. This was once the home for Baumann Brothers Furniture & Rugs

https://daytoninmanhattan.blogspot.com/2015/07/the-baumann-bros-bldg-no-22-26-east.html

The building was designed by architects David and Jon Jardine for successful textile merchant James McCreery in 1881. The building was designed in the Neo-Grec and Neo-Classical design and until 1897 was the home for Baumann Brothers Furniture and Carpet store. It then passed to Woolworth’s and the broken up for other retailers. It is now home to Footlocker but you can still see the beauty in this building with its elaborate embellishments (DaytonianinManhattan.com)

You really have to stop and look at its Neo-Classical details to really appreciate this building

The intricate details of the McCreery Building

The floral details in the middle of the building

I got a chance to walk around Union Square once I finished my tours of Fifth Avenue and East 14th Street. It was a beautiful sunny day and people were outside enjoying the sun and shade in the park. The Farmers Market was going on which made it even busier. By the subway station, there were guys hustling to play chess. A typical day in Union Square Park. Thirty years ago just like Bryant Park or Madison Square Park, sensible people stayed away from these squares of green with the garbage and graffiti and drug dealing. How a City transforms itself over a period of time is confounding. From the ashes of COVID, another New York City is rising.

What impresses me the most about the park is that the crazy protestors never knocked our statues down. Inside Union Square are three very prominent and very famous statues of George Washington, Abraham Lincoln and General Lafayette.

George Washington

https://www.mountvernon.org/george-washington/

We are lucky that our statues were not knocked down like other cities in 2020. This impressive statue of General Washington sits at the entrance of Union Square.

https://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/union-square-park/monuments/1676

This impressive statue of George Washington was designed by sculptor Henry Kirke Brown and was dedicated in 1856. The moment Brown depicts is that of Evacuation Day, November 25, 1783, when Washington reclaimed the city from the British. With outstretched hand, he signals to the troops in a gesture of benediction (NYCParks.org).

Artist Henry Kirke Brown

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Kirke_Brown

Artist Henry Kirke Brown was an American born artist who had studied with artists in Italy for his training. He is best known for his figurative historical statues. He also designed the statue of Abraham Lincoln in Union Square.

On the southern part of Union Square is the Climate Clock atop the NYU Dorms at 60 East 14th Street. The facade of the building makes quite the statement above Union Square if you stop to look at its details.

The new climate clock and NYU dorms replaced the once seedy shopping district the was Union Square at 60 East 14th Street

https://climateclock.world/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Climate_Clock

The view of Union Square through the ages:

The Climate Clock melds art, science, technology, and grassroots organizing to get the world to #Actin Time. The project is centered on a simple tool: a clock that counts down the critical time window to reach zero emissions (our “Deadline”), while tracking our progress on key solution pathways (“Lifelines”) By showing us what we need to do by when, the Clock frames our critical mission — a rapid and just transition to a safe climate future — and puts it at the very forefront of our attention (Climateclock.world.com).

The building that single handedly changed Union Square (outside of Union Square Cafe) was the Zeckendorf Towers. This replaced the long closed S. Klein Department store that had closed in 1975 and lead to the seediness of the area. The store had been boarded up for years and led to the downfall of Union Square in the early 1980’s.

S. Klein Department Store on Union Square East was boarded up for years

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S._Klein

When the store was torn down to make way for the Zeckendorf Towers, this completely changed the area. That and the renovation of Union Square in the late 1980’s and the creation of the Union Square Farmers Market made this a desirable area once again.

The Zeckendorf Towers at One Irving Place/One Union Square East

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zeckendorf_Towers

The success of the Zeckendorf Towers changed the complexity of the neighborhood for years to come replacing the S. Klein Department store. The residential building was designed by the architectural firm of Davis, Brody & Associates and was name for owner William Zeckendorf. The building was finished in 1987.

Tucked off in the corner of the park is the statue of General Lafayette. Why this important figure of the Revolutionary War is hidden is unfortunate.

The statue of General Marie-Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert du Motier de La Fayette, Marquis de La Fayette

https://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/union-square-park/monuments/884

General Marie-Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert du Motier de La Fayette, Marquis de La Fayette

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gilbert_du_Motier,_Marquis_de_Lafayette

The larger-than-life-sized figure was sculpted by Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi, who also designed the Statue of Liberty (1886), another gift from the French government that figures prominently in New York Harbor. The granite pedestal designed by H.W. DeStuckle was donated by French citizens living in New York. (NYCParks.org).

Artist Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fr%C3%A9d%C3%A9ric_Auguste_Bartholdi

Frederic Auguste Bartholdi was a French born artist best known for designing the Statue of Liberty. Bartholdi attended the Lycée Louis-le-Grand in Paris where he graduated in 1852. He then went on to study architecture at the Ecole nationale superieure des Beaux-Arts (Wiki).

As the sun started to set on this Sunday afternoon, I passed 4 Irving Place which the first couple of floors were under scaffolding. I admired the clocktower on the top of the building, the beautiful embellishments and just the elegance of the building. The building is home to Consolidated Edison (ConEd).

The was designed by architect Henry Janeway Hardenbergh and architectural firm of Warren and Wetmore in the Neo-Classical design. The first phase of the building was started in 1911 and both phases were finished by 1929. The original section of the building is in the picture with the wings of the building to both sides (Wiki).

I passed 4 Irving Place, the Con Ed Building, just as twilight hit the building and you could see the beauty in its shadows.

Its clock told the time of the early evening.

The next morning when I walked past it again, you could see the true beauty of its design.

I also noticed that the roof top held a more intricate design than I noticed the night before. Look up at its intricate details to admire its beauty. This is part of the originally designed building.

Once I turned onto Irving Place, the old core of its industrial past gave way to the bohemian village it would become and stay in the future. This was once ‘THE’ neighborhood to live in and has stayed that way since even through the rough times of Union Square.

The most impressive object you will see in the neighborhood is this bust of Washington Irving that sits outside the Washing Irving Campus on Irving Place.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Washington_Irving_Campus

This bust of Washington Irving was created by artist Friedrich Beer

Artist Friedrich Beer

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friedrich_Beer

https://www.artprice.com/artist/112959/friedrich-beer

Artist Friedrich Beer was a German born artist known for his works on busts of famous individuals.

The neighborhood goes from commercial to more residential as you get further up Irving Place and closer to Gramercy Park. The borders of Union Square overlap with Gramercy Park and the Flatiron District between East 18th and East 20th streets so I revisited buildings that J had seen before. If people went in a Time Machine to Manhattan from 100 years ago they would still see the same buildings but with totally different uses.

The Washington Irving house at 122 East 17th Street and Irving Place (Washington Irving never lived here)

https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/the-irving-house-new-york-new-york

The “Irving House” was built by Peter Voorhis between 1843 and 1844, along with the adjacent two houses at 45 and 47 Irving Place. The original tenants of 49 Irving Place (at that time referred to as 122 East 17th Street) were Charles Jackson Martin, an insurance executive, and his wife, who would reside there from 1844 until 1852. Henry and Ann E. Coggill would live in it in 1853, and in 1854 it would become the home of banker Thomas Phelps and his wife Elizabeth, who would remain until 1863 (Atlasobsucra.com).

The front of the house facing Irving Place

The first mention in print of Irving having lived in the house came in the Sunday Magazine Supplement of the New York Times on April 4, 1897. The article is a human interest story about Elsie de Wolfe and the means and methods she used to decorate “Irving’s house.” In 1905, de Wolfe would become known as the first professional interior decorator and it appears this article is an early attempt at publicity for her. As for the information about Irving, the article takes enormous liberties (actually, it flat-out makes things up), claiming that Irving had conceived of the house himself and was very particular about the architecture and design (Atlasobsucra.com).

The entrance to the house at 122 East 17th street

The plaque on the house dedicated to the writer created by artist Alexander Finta

In 1930, a restaurant called the Washington Irving Tea Room was operating in the basement of the building and in 1934 a plaque sculpted by Rodin-student Alexander Finta was put up on the north facade that would cement the story in the public consciousness. Today, the surrounding area remains covered in references to Irving, from the large art installations in the nearby W Hotel to the Headless Horseman pub on 15th Street(Atlasobsucra.com).

Artist Alexander Finta

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Finta

https://www.askart.com/artist/Alexander_Finta/108330/Alexander_Finta.aspx

Artist Alexander Finta was a Hungarian born artist who moved to the United States in 1923. He had studied mechanical engineering in his own country and had studied with Auguste Rodin. His is known for his elaborate busts. He spent the remainder of his career at 20th Century Fox Studios (Wiki)

All along the Irving Place corridor, the street is lined with interesting and historical buildings many of them turned into restaurants or inns. There are many historic plaques in this neighborhood and some creative architecture. The first building that caught my eye was 53 Irving Place, which is the home of Pierre Loti Wine Bar.

Review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d2136974-Reviews-Pierre_Loti_Wine_Bar-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

The home of Pierre Lotte Mediterranean Restaurant at 53-55 Irving Place was the home of O Henry

When I looked at the side of the building near the entrance, I was this historic plaque that said that this was the home of author William Sidney Porter (O. Henry). The author lived here from 1903-1907 and wrote the “Gift of the Magi” while living here and eating at Pete’s Tavern across the street (Wiki).

The historic plaque for author O Henry at 53-55 Irving Place

Author William Henry Porter

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/O._Henry

Down the road at is Pete’s Tavern, one of the most famous and the oldest literary restaurants in the City. The restaurant was founded in 1864 as the Portman Hotel and then in 1899 when changed to Healy’s Cafe when it was run by John and Tom Healy. Then in 1899, it was bought by Peter D’ Belles and renamed Pete’s Tavern. The restaurant was a ‘Speakeasy’ during prohibition and the dining rooms have not changed much over the last over hundred years (Pete’s Tavern website).

Pete’s Tavern was busy on the night of my first part of the walk.

Pete’s Tavern at 129 East 18th Street

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pete%27s_Tavern

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d527869-Reviews-Pete_s_Tavern-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

The entrance of Pete’s Tavern

The entrance to Pete’s Tavern on Irving Place

The painting outside of Pete’s Tavern of the Speakeasy years

Pete’s Tavern was busy both nights that I passed it. I had not eaten there in over a decade when I had a holiday dinner there with friends by I remember the food and service being excellent. The restaurant is really special during the Christmas holiday season from what I can remember.

My friends Barbara, Lillian and I after dinner at Pete’s Tavern in the early 2000’s

Another restaurant I went to before my friend, Barbara, moved to Florida was a Friend of the a Farmer at 77 Irving Place, a farm to table concept before it became very popular. I remember the food being wonderful but the place being a bit noisy. She lived on the fringe of Gramercy Park and had passed this restaurant many times and had wanted to try it that evening.

Another great restaurant is Friend of a Farmer at 77 Irving Place

https://www.friendofafarmer.com/

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d496790-Reviews-Friend_of_a_Farmer-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

Across the street, I passed this apartment building at 76 Irving Place. I loved the outside embellishments on the building and the friendly looks you get from the statuary. The building was built in 1897 by architect Lyndon P. Smith (Corcoran Group).

You have to look up to admire the details of 76 Irving Place

https://www.corcoran.com/listing/for-sale/76-irving-place-manhattan-ny-10003/23012133/regionId/1

https://streeteasy.com/building/76-irving-place-new_york

The entrance to 76 Irving Place with its tiny angels

This woman guards the front of Irving Place like guard

This woman greets you at 76 Irving Place

The classic architecture of the block especially as you get closer to Gramercy Park changes from smaller apartment buildings to brownstones lining the parks southern border. Gramercy Park offers some of the most interesting architecture. This ivy covered building that impressed me so much as the sun was going down is at 80 Irving Place.

This building at East 19th street and Irving Place is typical for the buildings that once lined this neighborhood

80 Irving Place is currently under renovation

https://daytoninmanhattan.blogspot.com/2014/04/the-1854-house-at-no-80-irving-place.html

https://www.trulia.com/home/80-irving-pl-new-york-ny-10003-31506439

The house was built as a single family mansion between 1853 and 1854 and had been the home of the prominent Wood family and then to actress Agnes Ethel Tracy. Since 1987, it has been a single family home again. What I thought was interesting was that the house was used in the movie “Working Girl” as Sigourney  Weavers character’s home (DaytoninManhattan.com).

Look up at the beautiful details of 81 Irving Place

81 Irving Place in all its glory

https://www.elliman.com/newyorkcity/buildings-communities/detail/527-c-725-2766/81-irving-pl-gramercy-park-new-york-ny

https://streeteasy.com/building/81-irving-place-new_york

https://www.apartments.com/81-irving-pl-new-york-ny-unit-8a/5q6z3mp/

81 Irving Place is one of the most beautiful apartment complexes in the city that I have come across. The embellishments along the building are some of most detailed and elegant I have seen. This prewar Co-Op was built in 1929.

The details along the windows

The embellishments of the building

The dragons and demons that adorn the windows

The embellishments of the building

The unusual creatures at the doorways

The embellishments of the building

The creatures guarding the windows

The embellishments of the building

The rooftop gardens are protected by these griffins

The building has a whimsical almost storybook imagine of creatures protecting their home.

Where I want my future home to be when I retire to the City and can afford it is 19 Gramercy Park South. I have always loved this building since I fell in love with the neighborhood over thirty years ago. I always wanted a home with a key to Gramercy Park. The building has that classic turn of the last century look about it and it has always been my dream to live here when I retire. I need to hurry and win the lottery.

My dream home would be at 19 Gramercy Park South with a key to the park

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/19_Gramercy_Park_South

I had thought this was a apartment building but it is actually a single family mansion with 37 rooms. It was built in 1845 and when the mansion was extended by Stamford White in 1887 was the home of socially prominent Stuyvesant-Fish family. It is currently back to being a single family mansion (Wiki).

As I turned the corner at East 20th Street I never tire of peering into Gramercy Park and keep wishing for that key. Gramercy Park is still one of the most beautiful and fantastical parks in New York City. It has once been part of the Stuyvesant estate and got its name from Gramercy Farm that once stood here. It is the only piece of the old Rose Hill Farm still in existence (Wiki).

Gramercy Park on a glorious Spring day

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gramercy_Park

Another view of Gramercy Park

I love the beauty of this park. There is an English feel to this park that reminds me of London and some of the neighborhoods that I visited it there. I have never been inside the park but it would be fun to walk around. I found out from researching for another blog on the Rose Hill neighborhood is that Gramercy Park is the corner and last surviving parcel of the old Rose Hill Farm.

East 20th street across from the park has some of the most interesting brownstones in Manhattan. They add to the historic value of the neighborhood. When you turn the corner of Gramercy Park off Irving Place, you will see the classic architecture that surrounds the park. It is one of the most picturesque neighborhoods in Manhattan.

The beauty of East 20th Street across from Gramercy Park

Right across the street from the park sits one of the best known brownstones in the neighborhood housing the “Players Club”. This club was made famous by the movie “Manhattan Murder Mystery’” for the wine tasting scene.

The “Players Club” at 16 East 20th Street

https://theplayersnyc.org/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Players_(New_York_City)

The historic plaque on the building

The scene from “Manhattan Mystery”:

The movie “Manhattan Murder Mystery” by director Woody Allen was shot in the neighborhood

The mansion was built in 1847 and was the home of Valentine G. Hall. The building was bought by actor Edwin Booth, the older brother of John Wilkes Booth who assassinated President Lincoln. He kept a suite for himself at the top of the home and then turned the rest of the building into the “Players Club” in 1888. The club now serves as a social club with artifacts of the theater arts on display and a private restaurant (Wiki).

I loved the entrance way to 13 East 20th Street

https://streeteasy.com/building/13-east-20-street-new_york

This Co-Op building was built in 1910 and has the most elegant appearance at the entrance. This really looks like old New York.

I love the elegance of 13 East 20th Street

Another historical building on the block was 10 East 20th Street which was the home of painter Robert Henri.

East 20th Street the home to painter Robert Henri

The historic marker for painter Robert Henri

Artist Robert Henri

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Henri

https://www.nga.gov/collection/artist-info.1391.html

Artist Robert Henri was an American born artist. He studied at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts Philadelphia and at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris. He is best known for his works in the Impressionism movement (Wiki).

As I crossed Park Avenue South, I entered the familiar neighborhood of the Flatiron District meeting the bottom of the Rose Hill neighborhood. This is when Manhattan neighborhood borders get confusing. Since the Union Square technically ends at East 18th Street but that would leave two blocks open without being in a specific neighborhood, I stretched it to East 20th Street. This again borders the Flatiron and Rose Hill/NoMAD section of the City. I figure that I will let the realtors figure this one out.

When you cross the border at Park Avenue South, I admired the same buildings I had seen several month earlier when I walked these streets and avenues just as Fall semester at NYU began.

The building at 250 Park Avenue South houses the restaurant Barbounia in the base of the building.

Barbounia 250 Park Avenue

https://barbounia.com/

Review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d611431-Reviews-Barbounia-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

250 Park Avenue South was designed by architects Rouse & Goldstone in 1911 in the Neo-Classical design.

The detail work on 250 Park Avenue South

https://www.officespace.com/ny/new-york/2231029-250-park-avenue-south

The restaurant ‘Barbounia’ at 250 Park Avenue South

The detail work above the doorway to the building

Next to this building is another beautiful historic building at 42 East 20th Street, housing another great restaurant, The Gramercy Tavern.

The Gramercy Tavern

https://www.gramercytavern.com/

Review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60763-d424094-Reviews-Gramercy_Tavern-New_York_City_New_York.html?m=19905

The historic NS Meyer Building that houses the Gramercy Tavern restaurant

42 East 20th Street

https://www.14to42.net/20streete042.html

42 East 20th Street was designed by the architectural firm of Neville & Bagge and was built in 1890 in the Beaux-Arts design. N.S. Meyer was a military company selling Army and Navy equipment since 1868 (14to42.net).

The beauty of the NS Meyer Inc. building

Next to that is another beautiful building the at 36 East 20th Street. This commercial building was built in 1901 with Beaux-Arts details on it.

The building at 36 East 20th Street

36 East 20th Street

https://streeteasy.com/building/36-east-20-street-new_york

https://www.loopnet.com/Listing/36-38-E-20th-St-New-York-NY/32032143/

The building is a commercial building that was built in 1901.

You can see the beauty of all the details

The details on the top of 36 East 20th Street

Right down the street at 28 East 20th Street is the Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace Historic Site Museum. It had been closed for so long after COVID I never thought it would open any time soon. It did finally open late last year and I thought this was one of the most interesting of the historical homes in the City. This one had been completely recreated by the family and then furnished with family heirlooms from the original house. That makes for an interesting museum.

Theodore Roosevelt

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theodore_Roosevelt

The Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace National Historic Site at 28 East 20th Street

https://www.nps.gov/thrb/index.htm

My review on TripAdvisor:

https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g60763-d143273-Reviews-Theodore_Roosevelt_Birthplace_National_Historic_Site-New_York_City_New_York.html

My review on VistingaMuseum.com:

At 28 East 20th Street is the Theodore Roosevelt Birthplace Historic Site, which is an exact replication of the original home that President Theodore Roosevelt was born and raised. The house that originally stood on the site was built in 1848 and was bought by the Roosevelts in 1854. Theodore Roosevelt was born there on October 27, 1858, and lived in the house with his family until 1872, when the neighborhood began to become more commercial and the family moved uptown (Wiki).

The Roosevelt House Living Room

The original building was demolished in 1916 to make way for retail space, but upon the death of Roosevelt in 1919 the lot was purchased and the house rebuilt by the Women’s Roosevelt Memorial Association, which eventually merged with the Roosevelt Memorial Association in 1953 to form the Theodore Roosevelt Association. 

Theodore Roosevelt’s bedroom

Noted female American architect Theodate Pope Riddle was given the task of reconstructing a replica of the house, as well as designing the museum, situated next door, that serves to complete the site (Wiki).

The Parlor of the house

You have to take time when the museum is open to take the independent tour. When you walk around the house you will swear that the family had just left the room to grab something. It is well worth the trip to see how the family lived before they moved uptown.

The next building on the block that is unique is 7 East 20th Street, the old Holtz Building.

The old Holtz Building at 7 East 20th Street

The ornate, Beaux-Arts edifice was erected in 1907 as a commercial building with the Holtz Restaurant located on the lower two floors. In the early 1900’s Phillip Braender commissioned architect William C. Frohne to design a 12-story building, with the lower two floors being specifically customized and designed to house for the Holtz Restaurant. The Holtz was a high-end establishment catering to the upper echelon of the population and converted to condo lofts in 1987 (Corcoran Group.org/Streeteasy.org)

https://www.cityrealty.com/nyc/flatiron-union-square/holtz-house-7-east-20th-street/354

https://streeteasy.com/building/7-east-20-street-new_york

The detailed doorway

The embellishments by the doorway

The Holtz logo on the middle of the building

The Holtz Company sign at the top of the building

The beautiful Beaux-Art embellishment on the top of the building

The elegant details at the top of the building guard over the people who work here

Another great building on the block is the Hudson Company building at East 20th Street. This is a mixed use building that was built in 1910.

The Hudson Company building at East 20th Street

5 East 20th Street used to be a former carriage house.

https://streeteasy.com/building/5-east-20-street-new_york

Fifth Avenue and East 20th Street

After I finished the walk down East 20th Street, I walked back down Fifth Avenue to Union Square Park in the mid afternoon to see what was going on. There was a smaller version of the bigger weekend Farmers Market.

The Farmers Market in Union Square is one of the biggest and most popular Farmers Markets in the City

The Union Square Greenmarket in full swing on a sunny afternoon

https://www.grownyc.org/greenmarket/manhattan-union-square-m

After walking through all the stands and admiring the wares and the baked goods, I wanted to cool down with a walk through the park. I never really noticed all the beautiful statuary in the park before. There is a lot of interesting and famous works in the park.

The original layout of the park on a gold map

The golden plaque on the sidewalk outside Union Square Park with the original layout of the park

People relaxing in the park

New Yorkers relaxing on a warm sunny afternoon in Union Square Park

When I walked around the park, I noticed more and more artwork and statuary around the park. This flagpole is located in the middle of the park. You really have to walk around the base to appreciate the details the artist created on this.

The flagpole in the middle of the park

The Independence Flagstaff in Union Square Park

Although this flagstaff commemorates the 150th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence, it is also known as the Charles F. Murphy Memorial Flagpole. The intricate bas-reliefs and plaques were completed in 1926 by sculptor Anthony De Francisci and feature a procession of allegorical figures representing democracy and tyranny, the text of the Declaration of Independence, and emblems from the original 13 colonies. The enormous flagpole, said to be one of the largest in New York State, is capped with a gilded sunburst (NYCParks.org).

Artist Anthony De Francisci

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthony_de_Francisci

https://americanart.si.edu/artist/anthony-de-francisci-1173

Artist Anthony De Francisci is an Italian born artist whose family were stone carvers by trade. He studied at Copper Union and the National Academy of Design when he moved to New York City. He is known for his known for his work as a sculptor and his design of American currency.

The magnificent details in the flagpole

The details are amazing on the flagstaff

The flagpole was erected to commentate the 150th Anniversary of the Declaration of Independence

Located at the northern end of the Union Square is the prominent statue of President Lincoln. This statue stands and overlooks the lawn of the park.

Abraham Lincoln

https://www.whitehouse.gov/about-the-white-house/presidents/abraham-lincoln/

https://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/union-square-park/monuments/913

This impressive statue of Abraham Lincoln was designed by sculptor Henry Kirke Brown and was dedicated in 1870. In his statue of Lincoln, cast in 1868, and dedicated September 16, 1870, he combines a classically styled pose with a perceptive naturalism, uniting realistic detail with an idealistic stance (NYCParks.org).

Artist Henry Kirke Brown

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Kirke_Brown

Artist Henry Kirke Brown was an American born artist who had studied with artists in Italy for his training. He is best known for his figurative historical statues. He also designed the statue of George Washington in Union Square.

There is a lot more to Union Square than just the park. There is interesting architecture. Historic statuary, wonderful restaurants and great selection of stores.

The amazing part about Union Square is the transformation of the area in the past thirty years from a park that everyone avoided to one that people could not live without. From the days of being home to one of the biggest methadone clinics in the City to be home to Union Square Cafe which transformed the park, Union Square has become the gateway to Uptown.

Finishing up the walk with some relaxation in the park

The Northern end of Union Square Park

The neighborhood has transformed itself with hip cafes, expensive lofts and a Farmers Market that is the benchmark that all others hold themselves. Just watching people sit and relax in the park reminds me of how this area had changed. You have to walk the streets to see the influences of the past and the present and how it has it has morphed to the neighborhood that it has become.

Union Square Park on that sunny warm June afternoon

As I explored the borders of the park, I came across a statue of a mother and child. I never noticed that this was an old water fountain for the park. It is always blocked off by vendors during either the Farmers or Arts Markets. With nothing in front of it, I could finally see it in its full form.

The Union Square Drinking Fountain

https://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/union-square-park/monuments/797

Consisting of a bronze statuary group atop a granite stepped pedestal, it was crafted by German sculptor Karl Adolph Donndorf and donated by philanthropist Daniel Willis James to promote public health as well as the virtue of charity (NYCParks.org).

Artist Karl Adolph Donndorf

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adolf_von_Donndorf

Artist Karl Adolph Donndorf was a German born artist know for his large realistic sculptures. He had served as an artist apprentice to further his education on sculpture (Wiki).

Just looking at old pictures online of Union Square in the 1970’s and 80’s shows me the power and resilience of Manhattan. It just goes to show you how a City can reinvent itself even in the worst of times and keep morphing!

The other blogs on the Union Square neighborhood:

Day Three Hundred and Thirteen: Walking the Borders of Union Square:

https://wordpress.com/post/mywalkinmanhattan.com/48888

Day Three Hundred and Seventeen: Walking the Avenues of Union Square:

https://wordpress.com/post/mywalkinmanhattan.com/50233

Day Three Hundred and Eighteen: Walking the Streets of Union Square:

https://wordpress.com/post/mywalkinmanhattan.com/50516