Mondays on Memory Lane: HURRICANE SANDY HITS THE EAST RIVER
This photo was taken from Long Island City, Queens. I braced myself against a cement bench to prevent myself from blowing away. United Nations, Trump Tower, Empire & Chrysler building in skyline.
October 28, 2013 | Categories: DAILY PHOTOS WITH STORIES OF NEW YORK CITY | Tags: Chrysler building, East River, Empire State Building, Hans Von Rittern, Hurricane Sandy, Long Island City Queens, Manhattan, Manhattan skyline in hurricane, New York City, New York photo, Pepsi Cola sign, Photo of the day, photography, Queens, raging waves on East River, Sunnyside, United Nations | Leave a comment
Photo of the day: THE ULTIMATE NEW YORK TREE
December 23, 2012 | Categories: DAILY PHOTOS WITH STORIES OF NEW YORK CITY | Tags: 3-D ornaments, arts, Christmas gifts, Christmas market, Christmas ornaments, Christmas tree, Chrysler building, decoupage, Empire State Building, Flatiron building, Grand Central Terminal, Hans Von Rittern, Harold Gilstein, HUT STUDIOS, last minute gifts, Manhattan, New York City, photoshop, Richard Hopper, Roosevelt Tram, souvenir, Staten Island Ferry, United Nations, Woolworth Building | Leave a comment
Storm photo: THE RAGING MANHATTAN EAST RIVER AT HEIGHT OF HURRICANE SANDY
October 30, 2012 | Categories: DAILY PHOTOS WITH STORIES OF NEW YORK CITY | Tags: Chrysler building, Empire State Building, Hans Von Rittern, Hurricane Sandy, Long Island City Queens, Manhattan, Manhattan skyline, New York City, Trump Tower, United Nations | 1 Comment
Photo of the day: PEPSI COLA HITS THE SPOT
PEPSI COLA HITS THE SPOT: After the rebirth of Pepsi by the Pepsi-Cola Corp. in 1934, Charles G. Guth (the new owner of the Pepsi trademark) built the then largest Pepsi bottling plant in the industrial neighborhood of Long Island City, Queens on the East River. The facility manufactured their own syrup from cane sugar and produced its own bottle caps.
In 1938, Pepsi commissioned the Artkraft Strauss Sign Corp. to build a sign to adorn the top of the Long Island City plant. The sign is 120 feet wide with it’s tallest letters over 44 feet tall. A 50 foot tall capped bottle of Pepsi sits to the right of the brand name.
The sign was refurbished in 1994 by the same company that constructed it in the 1930’s. The plant was in operation until 1998. The land was sold to the Rockrose Development Corp. and an agreement was made that the sign be preserved. Since then, the sign has found a permanent home on the Queens waterfront not far from the foundation of the old plant.
The sign can be seen clearly from Manhattan on the east side of the city and one of the attractions from atop The Empire State Building.
September 19, 2012 | Categories: DAILY PHOTOS WITH STORIES OF NEW YORK CITY | Tags: Empire State Building, Hans Von Rittern, Long Island City Queens, New York City, nightime view, Pepsi Cola, United Nations | 1 Comment