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Showing posts with the label subway

Animated History of the NYC Subway

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There's a good chance you saw this on Gothamist, but I wanted to put it here anyway for like Posterity 'n' Stuff, Inc. History of the New York City Subway system: an animated GIF starts with a blank subway map and draws each line in the sequence in which it was built. [source: very-appealing.com ]

Sounds of the Subway: Global Edition!

What follows is an impressive catalog of departure sounds and next-station announcements of subway systems around the world.  Courtesy: mic-ro.com/metro/table.html © 2004-2015 metrobits.org Amsterdam An electronic "ding-dong" signal. There is also a "ding" and in a pre-recorded voice the next station name. At the terminus, the voice says "Endpunt". Ankara "Booop! Ding-dang" sound when the doors close. Athens There is a series of beeps that starts when the doors start closing and stops when they are closed. Then when a train reaches the next station there is a ding-dong and a station announcement in both Greek and English (English added for the 2004 Olympics). Lines 2 and 3: There is a continuous beep when the doors start closing until they are closed. Atlanta The MARTA subway in Atlanta has a 1 kHz beep going off four times on the newer trains, like: "boop-BOOP-BOOP-BOOP". The old trains have a loud "PONG".

The City in Ruins: Rue York?

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Subway Coney Island Statue of Liberty under construction in 1985
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new york living-er

http://blogs.villagevoice.com/runninscared/2012/02/mta_plans_59_mo.php Looks like the 1/2/3 line is going to be completely shut down every night this week from 10pm to 5am. G TRAIN WINS AGAIN

best picture from below article

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The Center for Missed Connections

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I decided to repost this from the Voice ... ​Under the semi-serious auspices of the  Center for Missed Connections , 24-year-old Ingrid Burrington, who grew up in California, has been studying Craigslist's outlet for the lonely, the hopeful, the romantic, the horny, and the insane for more than two years now. It all started with what she calls a whimsical question: "What's the loneliest place in any given city, and how can I measure it?" From there she turned to chronicling Missed Connections, which led to a  map for an art show in 2009 at Pratt ,  a book project , and, currently, a  residency through the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council . From her website: The Center for Missed Connections (CMC) began as a project simply to identify where the most missed connections happen in a given city. New York City is home to the pilot program, chosen for its high traffic and for the propensity of posters to include specific cross-streets or location information. Since the