New York's famous JFK airport is richer for a luxury animal terminal. It is the first terminal of its kind in the world. It covers an area of 178,000 square meters and swallowed 65 million US dollars.
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It is a special pleasure when we come across a green wave on one of the city's roads. But you will never succeed in the way that Noah Forman "rode" him. He encountered as many as 240 green traffic lights in a row!
President-elect Donald Trump usually gets around in a luxury limousine, but when he was in a hurry to get to the White House to speak with President Barack Obama, he was overjoyed to be met at the entrance by Mario Andretti instead of his regular formula driver, on Croatian-born American motorsports legend, and offered him an express ride to the president's residence at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.
Will we ride gondolas around New York in the future? If you're thinking of moving to the capital of the world, we suggest you invest in flood insurance and a gondola, you know, that long, narrow boat with curves at the ends that's intrinsically associated with Venice. Why? A new study finds that many floods, like the one in 2012 when Hurricane Sandy ravaged the US and flooded subways and streets, will be three to 17 times more common by the end of the century.
The Improv Everywhere team prepared an interesting flash mob in Byrant Park in New York. Dressed identically, they stood in front of a stage that read "Dance Coach Wanted" and waited for a random passer-by to step on it. At first, they just watched in amazement, but then some individuals took courage, stepped onto the stage and showed the hundred dancers their dance steps. They faithfully followed their every move.
New York photographer Omar Rombles returned from Cuba months ago with wonderful photos of ballet dancers on the street. This time, their beat was hunting on the streets of bustling New York.
New York has been in a state of emergency for the past few days, as a severe snowstorm has engulfed the eastern United States. They even closed the roads, but that didn't stop some from being chased off the streets by the snow, which is a rarity in New York. Casey Neistat took advantage of the snowfall to snowboard the streets of New York. Check out the amazing footage that will make you miss the snow too.
Australian designer Dion Lee drove the American audience crazy at New York Fashion Week with a type of jewelry you've never seen before. When the models walked down the catwalk, they weren't wearing headbands or piercings of any kind, but a custom-made piece of metal that perfectly shaped the face. And this piece of metal became a trend the moment it appeared!
We have finally arrived at New York Fashion Week, which, in addition to the spring-summer 2016 fashion shows, also marked the start of exciting "street style" happenings on the streets of New York. Let's see what the fashionistas who are in a hurry in the fashion capital these days wore to attend fashion shows and other events...
Skyscrapers and other tall buildings have become the main symbols of modern cities. This also applies to New York, which is one of the most visited destinations in the world with the greatest architectural attractions in the world. Vasily Klyukin, however, went a step further in the design and imagined a slightly modified and even bolder image of Manhattan. Namely, he added a woman's leg in high heels to the fictional high-rise building "Top Sexy Tower", which looks out from the normally designed building, like Angelina Jolie's bare leg from the Versace dress at the Oscars in 2013.
Rides in the panoramic elevator are always something special. This is especially true if we rise above the city, as is the case with the 94-story skyscraper One World Trade Center, also known as the Freedom Tower, located in New York's Manhattan district (it stands on the twin towers). Now its visitors will be treated to an even more special view. During the ascent, New York will "grow" in front of them from the year 1500 onwards.
Nina Leen is the author of black and white photographs of celebrities with their pets on the streets of New York, which were taken in the 1940s.