World Trade Center
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In May 2013, the final piece of the spire was installed atop One World Trade Center, bringing the building to its symbolic height of 1,776 feet. Acting as both a striking architectural focal point and a broadcasting antenna, the iconic spire cemented the tower as a beacon of recovery and hope. Today, it stands as the tallest building in the Western Hemisphere.
Photos by Joe Woolhead

In May 2013, the final piece of the spire was installed atop One World Trade Center, bringing the building to its symbolic height of 1,776 feet. Acting as both a striking architectural focal point and a broadcasting antenna, the iconic spire cemented the tower as a beacon of recovery and hope. Today, it stands as the tallest building in the Western Hemisphere.
Photos by Joe Woolhead

May at the WTC means beautiful blue skies and green trees.
Photo by Francis Dzikowski
If you’re looking to meet a finance bro, look no further than in and around The World Trade Center. Because in Lower Manhattan and FiDi, you’ll find them in a strict rotation between Equinox, Brookfield Place, and Nobu.
#corporatehumor #nyc #financebros
May is #NationalBikeMonth so we thought we'd celebrate the occasion by showing how the one and only Marcus Samuelsson (@marcuscooks) makes the commute between his two restaurants!
@havandmar
@metropolisbymarcussamuelsson

New around Lower Manhattan!
For ten years, 109 Washington Street has been Chef Eduard Frauneder's kitchen. It was formerly home to Schilling, his beloved contemporary Austrian restaurant.
Now it's become something new. @cafefleurinyc is the Michelin-starred chef's Southern French restaurant, with a menu drawn from the markets, coast, and countryside of Provence and the Côte d'Azur.

New around Lower Manhattan!
For ten years, 109 Washington Street has been Chef Eduard Frauneder's kitchen. It was formerly home to Schilling, his beloved contemporary Austrian restaurant.
Now it's become something new. @cafefleurinyc is the Michelin-starred chef's Southern French restaurant, with a menu drawn from the markets, coast, and countryside of Provence and the Côte d'Azur.

New around Lower Manhattan!
For ten years, 109 Washington Street has been Chef Eduard Frauneder's kitchen. It was formerly home to Schilling, his beloved contemporary Austrian restaurant.
Now it's become something new. @cafefleurinyc is the Michelin-starred chef's Southern French restaurant, with a menu drawn from the markets, coast, and countryside of Provence and the Côte d'Azur.

New around Lower Manhattan!
For ten years, 109 Washington Street has been Chef Eduard Frauneder's kitchen. It was formerly home to Schilling, his beloved contemporary Austrian restaurant.
Now it's become something new. @cafefleurinyc is the Michelin-starred chef's Southern French restaurant, with a menu drawn from the markets, coast, and countryside of Provence and the Côte d'Azur.

Attention concert-goers and music lovers!
@exploreWTC and @downtownNYC will be partnering again to bring their yearly "Art is All Around" Concert Series here to the WTC!
Performances will be taking place on Cortlandt Way.
The program will run weekly starting May 13th, from 12pm-2pm on the below dates:
May 13th, May 20th, May 27th
Photos courtesy of @exploreWTC

Attention concert-goers and music lovers!
@exploreWTC and @downtownNYC will be partnering again to bring their yearly "Art is All Around" Concert Series here to the WTC!
Performances will be taking place on Cortlandt Way.
The program will run weekly starting May 13th, from 12pm-2pm on the below dates:
May 13th, May 20th, May 27th
Photos courtesy of @exploreWTC

Attention concert-goers and music lovers!
@exploreWTC and @downtownNYC will be partnering again to bring their yearly "Art is All Around" Concert Series here to the WTC!
Performances will be taking place on Cortlandt Way.
The program will run weekly starting May 13th, from 12pm-2pm on the below dates:
May 13th, May 20th, May 27th
Photos courtesy of @exploreWTC

📻 Before Silicon Valley, there was Radio Row! ⚡️
This buzzing district once packed 400+ shops selling radios and electronic parts helped Lower Manhattan become the city's very first "electronic district."
Fast forward to today and artist Taezoo Park @digitalbeing is bringing that legacy back to life with a new, and constantly-evolving art exhibit.
"Park’s installation, which has been running indefinitely since its 2024 launch, captures some of the densely packed chaos of the original Radio Row. Park’s art is made of discarded technology, particularly TVs that were obsolete after broadcasts switched over to digital systems in 2009. The artist is giving them new life through sensors, coding and complicated wiring to connect it all. It creates a feedback loop between humans and technology, which was what Radio Row did in the first place."
It’s a reminder that innovation has always been at the very core of Lower Manhattan.
To learn more about this exhibit, check out our link in bio!
Photos by Joe Woolhead

📻 Before Silicon Valley, there was Radio Row! ⚡️
This buzzing district once packed 400+ shops selling radios and electronic parts helped Lower Manhattan become the city's very first "electronic district."
Fast forward to today and artist Taezoo Park @digitalbeing is bringing that legacy back to life with a new, and constantly-evolving art exhibit.
"Park’s installation, which has been running indefinitely since its 2024 launch, captures some of the densely packed chaos of the original Radio Row. Park’s art is made of discarded technology, particularly TVs that were obsolete after broadcasts switched over to digital systems in 2009. The artist is giving them new life through sensors, coding and complicated wiring to connect it all. It creates a feedback loop between humans and technology, which was what Radio Row did in the first place."
It’s a reminder that innovation has always been at the very core of Lower Manhattan.
To learn more about this exhibit, check out our link in bio!
Photos by Joe Woolhead

📻 Before Silicon Valley, there was Radio Row! ⚡️
This buzzing district once packed 400+ shops selling radios and electronic parts helped Lower Manhattan become the city's very first "electronic district."
Fast forward to today and artist Taezoo Park @digitalbeing is bringing that legacy back to life with a new, and constantly-evolving art exhibit.
"Park’s installation, which has been running indefinitely since its 2024 launch, captures some of the densely packed chaos of the original Radio Row. Park’s art is made of discarded technology, particularly TVs that were obsolete after broadcasts switched over to digital systems in 2009. The artist is giving them new life through sensors, coding and complicated wiring to connect it all. It creates a feedback loop between humans and technology, which was what Radio Row did in the first place."
It’s a reminder that innovation has always been at the very core of Lower Manhattan.
To learn more about this exhibit, check out our link in bio!
Photos by Joe Woolhead

📻 Before Silicon Valley, there was Radio Row! ⚡️
This buzzing district once packed 400+ shops selling radios and electronic parts helped Lower Manhattan become the city's very first "electronic district."
Fast forward to today and artist Taezoo Park @digitalbeing is bringing that legacy back to life with a new, and constantly-evolving art exhibit.
"Park’s installation, which has been running indefinitely since its 2024 launch, captures some of the densely packed chaos of the original Radio Row. Park’s art is made of discarded technology, particularly TVs that were obsolete after broadcasts switched over to digital systems in 2009. The artist is giving them new life through sensors, coding and complicated wiring to connect it all. It creates a feedback loop between humans and technology, which was what Radio Row did in the first place."
It’s a reminder that innovation has always been at the very core of Lower Manhattan.
To learn more about this exhibit, check out our link in bio!
Photos by Joe Woolhead

📻 Before Silicon Valley, there was Radio Row! ⚡️
This buzzing district once packed 400+ shops selling radios and electronic parts helped Lower Manhattan become the city's very first "electronic district."
Fast forward to today and artist Taezoo Park @digitalbeing is bringing that legacy back to life with a new, and constantly-evolving art exhibit.
"Park’s installation, which has been running indefinitely since its 2024 launch, captures some of the densely packed chaos of the original Radio Row. Park’s art is made of discarded technology, particularly TVs that were obsolete after broadcasts switched over to digital systems in 2009. The artist is giving them new life through sensors, coding and complicated wiring to connect it all. It creates a feedback loop between humans and technology, which was what Radio Row did in the first place."
It’s a reminder that innovation has always been at the very core of Lower Manhattan.
To learn more about this exhibit, check out our link in bio!
Photos by Joe Woolhead

Our home court for Friday Morning Old Dad Basketball is like one straight out of a video game. And the youngsters are very fortunate too.
The game is such a powerful and important part of the cultural bloodstream of this city.
For all ages and all backgrounds.
It’s hard to imagine one without the other. And it’s especially fun when the Knicks are winning. LGK.🏀🗽🇺🇸

Our home court for Friday Morning Old Dad Basketball is like one straight out of a video game. And the youngsters are very fortunate too.
The game is such a powerful and important part of the cultural bloodstream of this city.
For all ages and all backgrounds.
It’s hard to imagine one without the other. And it’s especially fun when the Knicks are winning. LGK.🏀🗽🇺🇸
If you can bet on one thing, it’s that he’s getting his slop bowl with double protein because…gains.
#corporatehumor #nyc #finance #comedy
👀 There’s a hidden museum inside the top floors 3 World Trade Center…
Here’s Dara McQuillan Chief Marketing & Communications Officer at World Trade Center @wtc showing us this collection that is usually not open to the public.
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