Park Avenue and 48th Street, New York City
New York City in 1980. |
So... what does this scene look like now?
It turns out that the view hasn't changed very much in almost 40 years. The major alteration is the addition of a little raised garden area that includes a tree. For our limited purposes, this relatively minor change is most unfortunate because it completely blocks out our 1980 scene. While New York City's Park Avenue landscape really hasn't evolved much over the decades, time after time in this series we see the addition of trees to soften up the harsh landscape captured in the original 1980 photo. You have to admit that the tree and the related greenery sure do relieve the grim atmosphere that was captured in 1980. So, score one for the city planners!
The building on the right with the giant black pillars is Two Seventy Park Avenue. The building is unchanged, only the sidewalk in front of it has been modified over the decades.
The building we are facing on the southwest corner of Park Avenue and East 47th Street is 250 Park Avenue. Notice that it is easily identifiable by the huge stone pillar and the distinctive window area above the storefront. In 1980, the storefront housed a Marine Midland Bank. Today, or at least in October 2017 when the Google Street View car rolled by, it housed a People's United Bank. Yes, it is still a bank.
If we pull back a bit more, we get a better sense of exactly where we are. Just down Park Avenue to the south is the MetLife Building, which in 1980 would have been the Pan Am Building. Beyond that, of course, is Grand Central Terminal. Anyway, I hope you enjoyed this example of our guiding principle in this series, that the more things change, the more they stay the same.
One last looking, from the other direction, looking north from 47th Street toward the original photographer's position on the corner of 48th Street. |
2019
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