Home > Arts & Attractions > Skyscraper Museum
Text Size: A | A | A

Skyscraper Museum

(212) 968-1961
39 Battery Place,
New York, NY 10280
Share This
Change date range shown below:

to
Editor Rating User Rating Event Date & Time
Manhattan Mini Models -- Arts - Museum Exhibits, Arts - Architecture/Design, Arts - Sculpture
Venue: Skyscraper Museum
Cost: Adults: $5.00
Seniors: $2.50
Students: $2.50
Two highly-detailed, hand-carved miniature wooden models of Downtown and Midtown Manhattan on permanent display. Donated by Mike Chesko, a 49-year-old retiree and devoted amateur model maker. Chesko's models measure 17-3/4 by 20 inches for the Lilliputian Lower Manhattan and 37 by 31 inches for Midtown. The scale of the model is 3/8 inch for every 100 feet, meaning that the 1,250 foot Empire State Building reaches only 4.7 inches tall. The tallest of the tiny buildings are the Twin Towers (still standing in this model) which soar a full 5.1 inches. These models are so small that ten city blocks can fit in the palm of your hand. The result of thousands of hours of dedicated labor and craftsmanship, Chesko's delightful miniature models of Manhattan are on public display for the first time at The Skyscraper Museum.

Not Rated Rate It
11/22/2009
12:00 PM

11/25/2009
12:00 PM

11/26/2009
12:00 PM

11/27/2009
12:00 PM

11/28/2009
12:00 PM

11/29/2009
12:00 PM

Maps and Photographs of Lower Manhattan -- Arts - Museum Exhibits, Arts - Photography
Venue: Skyscraper Museum
Cost: Adults: $5.00
Seniors: $2.50
Students: $2.50
Lower Manhattan in the Sixties was a mature business district trapped in the fitments of an earlier age. A corset of finger piers bounded the island's edge, constraining growth. The downtown waterfront had been rendered obsolete, first by larger ships with deeper drafts, and from the late 1950s, by containerization which drove shipping to relocate to the vast, vacant expanses of the New Jersey lowlands. Of 51 piers, only 18 were active in 1966. The remnants of the working waterfront still exaggerated congestion, as cargo was unloaded onto the street. Elevated highways intended to improve traffic flow further segregated the public from the rivers. The reclamation and reinvention of the waterfront became a chief focus of plans for Lower Manhattan. Strategies included demolishing the decaying piers and enlarging the island, either by landfill, as at Battery Park City, or by platforming over the water, as intended, but not executed, on the East River. The low-rise, mostly 19th-century mercantile buildings that occupied the area adjacent to the piers were slated for demolition under the city's urban renewal policy. In their place, planners envisioned development zones of modern office buildings and new residential neighborhoods. The two business magnets were the World Trade Center complex and the South Ferry and Water Street district.

Not Rated Rate It
11/22/2009
12:00 PM

11/25/2009
12:00 PM

11/26/2009
12:00 PM

11/27/2009
12:00 PM

11/28/2009
12:00 PM

11/29/2009
12:00 PM