Posts Tagged ‘Liz Berger’

Downtown Alliance Honors 12 Public Safety Officers

Friday, April 5th, 2013

Twelve Downtown Alliance Public Safety Officers were honored Tuesday, at The Ketch on Pearl Street, for helping to keep Lower Manhattan one of the safest neighborhoods in the five boroughs.

“Our public safety officers are the most recognizable faces of the Downtown Alliance,” said Downtown Alliance President Elizabeth H. Berger. “These men and women in red improve the experience of Lower Manhattan’s millions of workers, residents and visitors every day and I thank them for their hard work and dedication.”

The 57 public safety officers, known for their bright red uniforms, work hand in hand with the New York City Police Department’s First Precinct, which has a substation in the Downtown Alliance’s Public Safety Office. Criminal activity in Lower Manhattan has dropped considerably since the Downtown Alliance and NYPD began working together 13 years ago. The public safety team is also trained to provide Lower Manhattan’s 11.5 million annual tourists with directions, district maps, and recommendations on local attractions.

Public Safety Officers received recognition from the Downtown Alliance for the following:

June 1, 2012Security Officer Edwin Velez reported a fire on the 17th floor of 116 John Street. Velez and Supervisor Shawn Soto assisted the police department in securing the area and safely evacuating residents.

July 17, 2012Security Officer Giovanni Lombardo notified the police department after several skateboarders refused to stop skating on property at 17 Battery Place during the early morning. The skateboarders, one of whom provided police officers with false identification, were arrested for destruction of property and identity theft.

August 23, 2012Supervisor German Rosario and Security Officer Jonathan Molina reported and altercation between two food cart vendors on Fulton and Church Streets. After the NYPD and EMS were notified and the vendors’ injuries were treated, both men were arrested for assault.

October 16, 2012Security Officer Luis Soto reported a man who was suspiciously recording Lower Manhattan landmarks. The NYPD Intelligence Division opened a case and Security Officer Soto’s photographs of this suspicious person are being used as evidence in the active case.

Hurricane Sandy: October 29-31, 2012 – The following public safety members are recognized for their outstanding, around-the-clock performance during Hurricane Sandy:

  • Supervisor Rosa Ellis
  • Supervisor German  Rosario
  • Supervisor Jason Rivera
  • Supervisor David Weeks
  • Security Officer Jaquan Brown
  • Security Officer Joseph Cuadrado
  • Security Officer Giovanni Lombardo
  • Security Officer Steven Maldonado

Putting family obligations on hold, these eight safety officers remained on duty for the duration of the storm. They provided instrumental minute-to-minute, on-the-ground updates on the weather conditions, street closures, and flood impacts in Lower Manhattan.

Visit the Downtown Alliance’s Flickr page to view photos from the event held at the Ketch on Pearl Street.

Another Successful Mulchfest

Wednesday, January 16th, 2013

(L-R): Community Board 1 Vice Chair Anthony Notaro, Downtown Alliance President Liz Berger and New York City Council Member Margaret Chin

On Saturday, the Downtown Alliance held its fifth annual MulchFest event in Bowling Green Park, and close to 320 trees were collected!

Our Alliance box truck made special MulchFest stops to pick up trees left by residents at six convenient locations in and around our district.

We had a nice turn out, including families making the trek by foot with their tree in hand. Even New York City Council Member Margaret Chin and Community Board 1 Vice Chair Anthony Notaro dropped by to help turn holiday trees into mulch.  And, everyone present was treated to some hot apple cider and light snacks.

For the third year in a row, we jointly held an Electronic Waste Recycling Event at the site with the Lower East Side Ecology Center. We’re told that several tons of materials were collected this time around.

The MulchFest co-sponsors include Con Edison, Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr LLP, the New York City Departments of Sanitation and Parks & Recreation, Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer, New York City Council Member Margaret Chin, Community Board 1, the FiDi Association, Lower East Side Ecology Center, Tekserve, and Whole Foods.

A special thanks to the Grotto Pizzeria and the West Bank Gourmet for lending us their thermal urns for the apple cider.

Click here to see more photos from the event.

Downtown Alliance Awards Grants to Lower Manhattan Small Businesses through Back to Business Grant Program

Tuesday, December 18th, 2012

The Alliance for Downtown New York, as part of its Lower Manhattan: Back to Business Small Business Grant Program established after Superstorm Sandy, today provided the first 17 grants to Lower Manhattan small businesses in an amount totaling $266,269 and also issued $120,000 in deferred grants to six small businesses that have not yet reopened.

“Small businesses have been instrumental in the success of Lower Manhattan as a premier destination to live, work and visit, and so it has been vitally important to come to their aid during this period,” said Elizabeth H. Berger, President of the Downtown Alliance. “These grants are helping small businesses who want to continue to prosper in our neighborhood, and we are proud to provide these funds now.”

“It’s been great to see so many businesses that were damaged by Hurricane Sandy open their doors back up in Lower Manhattan, and we are continuing to reach out and see how we can help those still working to get back on their feet,” said Rob Walsh, Commissioner of the NYC Department of Small Business Services. “Many businesses will greatly benefit from the Back to Business Grant Program, and I thank the Downtown Alliance for making these funds available for businesses in Lower Manhattan.”

The Downtown Alliance launched the Back to Business Small Business Grant Program on November 19th and then made details and applications available on November 30th, contributing the first $1 million and marshaling additional financial contributions amounting to more than $500,000 to date. Under the program, grants are being awarded to qualifying small businesses that are located within Flood Zone A  below Chambers Street.

Contributors include: Goldman Sachs, Trinity Church, Citibank, The Durst Organization, The Howard Hughes Corporation, AT&T New York and Deutsche Bank Americas Foundation, CBRE, the FiDi Association, and Platinum Properties. The latest donor to the program is real estate brokerage firm Cushman & Wakefield. Additionally, Platinum Properties announced that half of the proceeds from its holiday raffle, conducted Saturday at the company’s holiday party, will be donated to the Back to Business Small Business Grant Program.

“Cushman & Wakefield is proud to support the Downtown Alliance and its Small Business Grant Program,” said Suzy Reingold, Executive Managing Director of Cushman & Wakefield’s New York City offices. “We are committed to the recovery in Lower Manhattan and grateful that we have the opportunity to help the small businesses that office tenants and residents of the neighborhood rely so heavily upon.” 

“The Downtown Alliance’s Small Business Grant Program is a wonderful initiative we are very pleased to support,” said Khashy Eyn, CEO of Platinum Properties, who has been a Lower Manhattan resident since 2009. “Our first office was in the Financial District—we are originally a Lower Manhattan-based company. The small businesses that were hit hard by the storm are our neighbors and our community, and there is no better cause for our contribution.”

In today’s first round of grant distribution, qualifying businesses are receiving up to $20,000 in grants. The grants are being made to a nail salon, wine shop, dry cleaners, and others, who were among the first eligible businesses to apply for the assistance.

In today’s first round of grant distribution, qualifying businesses are receiving up to $20,000 in grants. The grants are being made to a nail salon, wine shop, dry cleaners, and others, who were among the first eligible businesses to apply for the assistance.

The Downtown Alliance processed completed applications on a first-come, first-served appointment basis. Due to overwhelming demand, the Downtown Alliance closed the period for local businesses to submit grant applications on December 13. Applications received after the closure of the filing period will be held but not processed unless more funds become available. Additional small business recovery resources can be found at: http://www.downtownny.com/businessrecovery.

2012 Holiday Shopping Season Officially Launched

Monday, November 19th, 2012

Excited for holiday lights and family gatherings? Ready to find great gifts for all your loved ones? Then get ready as the Alliance for Downtown New York kicks off the 2012 holiday season!

This year marks the fifth year of the Downtown Alliance’s Holiday Shopping Campaign, which is promoted through print and digital advertising and the release of the new 2012 Lower Manhattan Shopping & Dining Guide – a guide designed to showcase the district’s exciting options in which to purchase the ideal holiday gift or gather with friends and family at the perfect restaurant.

Though many Lower Manhattan establishments were disrupted by Superstorm Sandy, the vast majority of Lower Manhattan’s retailers and restaurants are open for business. The Downtown Alliance asks that you support the local retail community by patronizing Lower Manhattan businesses as part of your holiday shopping, dining and entertaining!

“With more than 1,100 shops and restaurants below Chambers Street, Lower Manhattan offers everything from deals to luxuries,” said Elizabeth H. Berger, President of the Downtown Alliance. “Now more than ever, it’s time to patronize Lower Manhattan’s local retailers. Whether you’re working, living, or visiting here, our fantastic shops and restaurant offer something special for everyone in Lower Manhattan this holiday season.”

To order a free hard-copy of the Shopping & Dining guide, click here or email us at ContactUs@DowntownNY.com. You can also find places in which to shop, dine or explore on the Downtown Alliance website, or download our free mobile app.

Other important 2012 holiday information and happenings include:

* Lower Manhattan Shooting Stars:
Look to the skies to see 199 shooting stars in Lower Manhattan. This coming weekend, the Downtown Alliance is installing holiday lights – for the 17th year – to brighten up the neighborhood for the holidays. The Business Improvement District is stringing up shooting stars and star clusters throughout the district until the first week in January.

* Downtown Connection Bus Service:
Downtown Connection buses offer free shuttle service around Lower Manhattan seven days a week, so shoppers weary from carrying bags can find a handy respite. Routes can be found by clicking here.

* Lower Manhattan Holiday Events:
There are a wide variety of holiday events happening across the district, including the tree lighting at the New York Stock Exchange, the holiday lights at the World Financial Center, and holiday card making at the Skyscraper museum. Check the Downtown Alliance’s holiday page for more details and offerings.

* Small Business Saturday:
Support “Small Business Saturday” on November 24, where American Express cardholders can get $25 off their next credit card statement by shopping at local small businesses. For more information, click here .

With neighbors working together, Downtown’s future is not so stormy

Thursday, November 15th, 2012

Liz Berger, Catherine McVay Hughes, and Borough President Scott Stringer visiting Seaport area businesses the Wednesday morning after the hurricane.

By Catherine McVay Hughes and Elizabeth H Berger

The last two weeks have proven again that the worst of Mother Nature cannot defeat Lower Manhattan.

We did not face this alone.  New Yorkers from all corners of the city experienced flooding, loss of power and, in some areas, devastating damage and tragic loss of life.

The two of us have lived below Fulton Street a combined total of 50 plus years. We have seen the neighborhood grow and celebrate its architecture, winding streets, restaurants and shops, sweeping views, parks and, most important, the sense of community which makes Lower Manhattan a great place in which to live and work.

But, being surrounded by two rivers proved a challenge amid what weather forecasters deemed an unprecedented “perfect storm,” one that brought formidable tidal surges, flooding our subways and streets, basements and storefronts.

No one can deny the impact on Lower Manhattan. As the two of us walked the district this past week, we witnessed the signs of hope and resilience that are second nature here: neighbors pitching in to help each other, small-business owners cleaning and repairing shops, and, remarkably arranging volunteer efforts to help fellow New Yorkers more profoundly impacted by Sandy’s blows:  pitching in to distribute FEMA food and water, picking up debris and sharing information. Neighbors lit stairwells with flashlights, pooled precious water and held impromptu potlucks.

From main thoroughfares to smaller cobblestoned streets, we saw evidence of hardship and hard work: small-business owners, professional crews, City workers, residents and volunteers pumping out water, sweeping streets, patching damaged windows. Our cultural institutions were off-limits to visitors, and stores were assessing damage and slowly reopening.

Every day, more stores and restaurants are reopening.  We’ve seen Jacques Capsouto and the Poulakakos family — which owns many eateries in the Financial District and Battery Park City, including Financier, Harry’s Italian and Vintry – getting back to business, wine seller Marco Pasanella re-sheetrocking his South Street storefront shop, Lance Lappin and Merchants NY reaching out to customers, Drs. Bobby Buka in the Seaport and Michel Cohen in Tribeca sending alerts to patients, Trinity Church advising parishioners and other community members, owners and managing agents informing tenants, and countless other formal and informal communications.

Less visible was the effect on some office and residential buildings, particularly east of Water Street and on the western edge of Tribeca into Battery Park City, where in some locations there is significant impact. For our community’s children, Halloween was not the same and the soccer season has been cut short. The spirit of the day reflected exhaustion, but also optimism and cooperation.

In the coming weeks, Community Board 1 and the Downtown Alliance will be there to help, as we have since storm warnings first aired, working with community leaders, property owners, government officials and others to bring relief to our neighborhood.

We applaud our elected leaders: our President, Governor and Mayor, New York’s two Senators, Congressman Nadler and our own hometown team: Speaker Silver, Senator Squadron, Assembly Member Glick, Borough President Stringer and Council Member Chin. And, kudos to the Port Authority, MTA and Con Edison.

As this goes to press, most of Lower Manhattan has power, buses are on their routes, subway lines are up and running, dewatering is coming to a close and repairs are well underway. The next step is to help our small businesses and others recover from unanticipated losses and delays, especially on the eve of the critical holiday shopping season. It’s time to dine and shop locally to support neighborhood stores and restaurants.

We must keep the momentum that has made Lower Manhattan the place to be for businesses, start-ups, residents and visitors.  All of us share a vision for Lower Manhattan that far exceeds Sandy’s temporary setbacks.

Whatever is thrown at us, we have prevailed. We look forward to a Lower Manhattan that will be stronger and better than ever.

Berger is President of the Alliance for Downtown New York. McVay Hughes is Chairperson of Community Board 1.

 

Adopt A Geranium Day – Another Huge Hit

Tuesday, October 16th, 2012

(l-r): Council Member Margaret Chin, Downtown Alliance President Liz Berger, Downtown Alliance Senior Vice President of Operations Joe Timpone

By Manny Lala

Despite the rainy weather, the annual Downtown Alliance Adopt-A-Geranium day at Bowling Green Park proved to be a huge hit once again.

About 4,000 geraniums were dug up from Bowling Green Park and given away to new and returning customers. “I still have my mine from last year!” said one excited guest while picking out another geranium to add to her collection. The Alliance staff encouraged guests to take more than one geranium in return that they take good care of the plants, as they last year-round and bloom bright red flowers during the spring season.

On Saturday, October 20th, the Downtown Alliance will be hosting Fall Community Planting Day, where everyone is encouraged to come help make Lower Manhattan “green” by re-planting Bowling Green Park.

Click here to view more pictures from the event.

 

Woolworth Building Gets Dressed Up in Heroic Fashion

Tuesday, September 4th, 2012

Joe DiMaggio. Ben Hogan. Althea Gibson. Mary Lou Retton. What do these people have in common?

They’ve all been honored down Lower Manhattan’s Canyon of Heroes! And now they are being featured in a photo installation outside of the historic Woolworth Building on Broadway between Barclay Street and Park Place. Make sure to stop by 233 Broadway to see historic images of notable American athletes who were feted along New York City’s historic parade route.

Collaborating with The Witkoff Group, property owners of the renowned Woolworth Building, the Downtown Alliance has unveiled several large-scale images from ticker tape parades of years past. This project is a test pilot for a possible new initiative to utilize vacant retail spaces as an opportunity to highlight the historic events that have occurred in Lower Manhattan while helping to market and maximize these vacant spaces.

The images, many of which are sourced from New York City Municipal Archives and feature famous American athletes, are located in the ground-floor windows of the famed Lower Manhattan property and along scaffolding that temporarily flanks the building. For photos of the project, click here.

“For more than a century, our city has honored some of history’s most notable athletes, heads of state, and scientists and many more , with ticker-tape parades down Lower Manhattan’s venerated Canyon of Heroes,” said Elizabeth H. Berger, President of the Downtown Alliance. “The Woolworth Building – one of the most celebrated and recognizable buildings in New York City – is the perfect canvas to draw attention to the history of Lower Manhattan and to animate the use of this vacant retail space.”

Scaffolding Installation at Woolworth Building

The ticker tape tradition – a quintessential New York celebration – began in 1886 to mark the unveiling of the Statue of Liberty. Ticker tape parades have since honored the likes of Winston Churchill in 1946, Nelson Mandela in 1990 and the New York Yankees countless times. (You can learn more about the parades and listen to a podcast here).

In 2003, the Downtown Alliance launched a program to commemorate the more than 200 parades with a series of granite strips set in chronological order every 20 feet along the traditional parade route from Battery Park to City Hall, with room for many more. The strips identify each parade and cite the achievements of the honorees, a group that also includes pioneers of air and space travel, soldiers, sailors, generals, sea captains, heads of state and royalty, journalists, firefighters and a prize-winning concert pianist.

As pedestrians glance down to read the names of honorees etched into the sidewalk strips, a popular history of the United States and a timeline of Lower Manhattan begins to emerge.

New Re:Construction Installation Comes to Historic Chase Manhattan Plaza

Monday, June 25th, 2012

Around the Corner by Greg Lamarche

It’s a city within a city – in Lower Manhattan.

While the renowned Chase Manhattan Plaza undergoes a facelift this year, the Downtown Alliance’s latest Re:Constuction project can now be viewed around the entire historic plaza.

“Now residents, workers and visitors around Chase Manhattan Bank can enjoy Greg Lamarche’s wonderful new addition to our program recasting construction sites as canvases for innovative public art and architecture,” said Liz Berger, President of the Downtown Alliance. “Re:Construction is an opportunity for government, artists, curators, property owners and business people to work together to make something beautiful. It’s a win-win for everyone.”

Inspired by the dynamism of his native New York City and its culture, Greg Lamarche’s collages combine the city’s relentless rhythm and a dynamic use of color and strong geometric forms that interpret the power, elegance and rebelliousness of urban creativity. This installation is on Pine, Nassau, and Williams streets and the best views of the project can be seen on Pine and Nassau streets. Additional photos of the installation can be viewed here.

“Shapes inspired by block letters are repeated to form a complex graphic skyline of color,” Lamarche said of Around the Corner. “The three dimensional aspect causes the viewer at first to see the overall design as receding into the background. At closer examination the image also moves forward and projects into the viewer’s space. This back and forth tension simultaneously creates a feeling of invitation and sense of being overwhelmed.”

Learn more about other Re:Construction projects HERE

Welcome to the City’s Oldest – And Newest – Hotel District

Thursday, June 14th, 2012

By Liz Berger

When I visited the gorgeous new Conrad New York a few weeks ago, I was reminded that though I have lived downtown for 30 years, I have only stayed in a Lower Manhattan hotel one night. It was November 1995, our loft had just been painted, and by 10 PM in those days before low VOC and other green inventions, we could no longer bear the off-gassing paint.

Fortunately, the Millenium Hotel across the street had a room available, and we hunkered down for the night in sweet-smelling style. The fumes had dissipated by morning, and it was back to unpacking, rehanging and making our own bed.

We were lucky to find accommodation at that late hour, because back then there were few hotels in Lower Manhattan.  How times have changed!  Today, there are three times as many hotels and 80 percent more rooms than there were just 10 years ago, with lodging options for both business and leisure travelers seeking modest rooms or luxury suites.

In fact, there haven’t been so many choices since the early 19th century. That’s no typo:  The Lower Manhattan hospitality business is more than 200 years old!

Hotels first opened here in the 1790s, as ships off the Atlantic and boats down the Hudson brought goods of every kind into Lower Manhattan, attracting buyers and sellers and bankers and middlemen, who streamed into town for business as well as pleasure. There were just too many visitors for the traditional boarding houses and taverns to handle, so in 1794 the five-story, 137-room City Hotel went up on Broadway near Trinity Church.

It was New York City’s first European-style hotel, with unheard of amenities like dining and dancing salons, an extensive wine cellar, street-level shops, a bar and coffeehouse. Others soon followed, and, by 1818, there were eight hotels in Lower Manhattan, a number that would not be surpassed for 188 years.

Some of these hotels were world-famous.  The 300-room Park Hotel, built in 1836 by John Jacob Astor on Broadway across from City Hall Park and later renamed the Astor House, was for a time considered the most prestigious hotel in the country.  It was the only place where famed Senator and orator Daniel Webster would stay in New York City (a three-room suite was kept in reserve for him).  And, it was where Abraham Lincoln holed up in 1860 to write and rewrite his famous Cooper Union address, which catapulted him to the presidency.

The Park was also the last major hotel to be built in Lower Manhattan for the next 145 years. Not until the 825-room Vista Hotel opened in 1981—as part of the transformative construction of the first World Trade Center—would Lower Manhattan see another one.

While five more hotels opened in the 1990s, the re-emergence of Lower Manhattan as a fashionable hotel district did not begin until the first decade of the 21st century.

Now there are 18 hotels with 4,092 rooms in the one square mile below Chambers Street, with five more scheduled to open by the end of 2014 and another 10 planned for construction.

Hotels are good for business. They are good for restaurants, for merchants, for museums and other attractions.  They make Lower Manhattan a tourism destination, not just one stop on the tour.  And, for those of us who live in Lower Manhattan, they are good for extra guests, family, colleagues and the occasional slumber party or special event.  Not to mention paint jobs.

Liz Berger is President of the Downtown Alliance.

Sonic Youth: Walking Through Lower Manhattan

Tuesday, May 29th, 2012

Lower Manhattan resident Lee Ranaldo is a singer, guitarist, writer, record producer, and visual artist, but he’s best known as a co-founder with Thurston Moore of the alternative rock band Sonic Youth. In the current issue of SPIN magazine, Ranaldo and Thurston share the #1 position on its “greatest guitarists of all time” list.

Ranaldo’s ninth solo album, Between the Times and Tides, was recently released, and its cover shows him walking in front of Walking Men 99, a 500-foot-long work highlighting 99 versions of the international “walk” symbol found on traffic signals around the world.

Walking Men 99—which covers three plywood street facades surrounding the Silverstein Properties construction site at 99 Church Street—is part of the Downtown Alliance’s ReConstruction program, which adorns construction sites with artwork.

Downtown Alliance President Liz Berger (a fellow P.S. 234 parent alum) is a BIG fan of Ranaldo’s and pointed out that only a few years ago Sonic Youth performed at the wildly popular River To River Festival, the Lower Manhattan summertime arts and culture festival.

The Downtown Alliance recently spoke with Ranaldo about his work, the neighborhood, and his inspiration.

Tell me about Between the Times and Tides.

In the spring of 2010, I was invited to play an acoustic show in the south of France. While preparing for that show, the song ‘Lost’ popped out of one of the guitars. Just like that. Two weeks later I opened the show with it, and somehow it just started something flowing. All summer I worked on some other acoustic demos, really just sitting around playing acoustic guitars and recording what was coming out. I was kind of reveling in the sheer pleasure of the acoustic sounds, and, as usual, working in many different tunings.

I’ve always been an acoustic guitar player. I’ve written material for Sonic Youth that way on occasion, and in general, it’s just a beautiful instrument. Although the sound is different, I’m still working with the same basic parameters as when playing electric. I guess I’d say you hear the melodies and voicings more without all the fuzz and volume, and for this music I was definitely interested in all that—the tones and chord progressions rather than a wild electric sound. I wasn’t putting any demands on this music that was popping out, just kind of following behind and seeing what happened.

I really thought I would gather the songs together and make a simple acoustic album.  Between about May 2010 and the end of the year I just kept at it, writing songs. By December I was starting to record acoustic demos in the Sonic Youth studio. A couple of the songs seemed to want more of a band treatment so I asked (Sonic Youth drummer) Steve Shelley in to play on them. Next, Irwin Menken was coming along on bass, and we had a group of “band songs” going.

Between January and March the three of us cut the eight band tracks, and from March to June all of the other players dropped in to do their work. It was a really fun process and very “organic” —one thing just seemed to lead to the next; there wasn’t a lot of stress involved. I really didn’t know how it would end up sounding until we were mixing it. But I knew the songs were strong and somehow it seemed they would find their proper “sound.” When Alan Licht, John Medeski and Nels Cline came in to work on them, they really began to take the shape you hear on the record.

How long have you lived in Lower Manhattan?

I moved to Lower Manhattan in 1980, shortly after moving to New York City. I spent a few months up in Washington Heights, and most of a year in downtown Brooklyn, and then moved into an eight-month sublet in Lower Manhattan, which somehow became 10 years in that same loft. I’ve never really left the area since then, raised my three kids in Tribeca, and have generally loved every minute of my time here.

Why did you move here?

I moved to New York City to pursue art and music—I’d trained as a visual artist at SUNY Binghamton and while there also started playing seriously in bands. I and two guys I was playing with there—both artists themselves—moved to New York City in summer 1979. I’ve been making both art and music in New York ever since. For some time once Sonic Youth took off, I didn’t have enough time to focus much on exhibiting artwork—we were so busy—and, anyway, we consider the music we make our artwork as well. In the last decade or more, I’ve been showing visual work again on a regular basis.

What do you like the most about the district?

I’ve always really liked the neighborhood aspect of the area. I liked it in 1980 when it was still mostly industrial, and I like it today, when it is so much more family-oriented. With P.S. 234 nearby, there is a great elementary school. It’s always struck me as about the most livable section of Manhattan.

Where do you go in the neighborhood for inspiration?

One place for sure – which has always been true – is along the Hudson River. The parks have really become an amazing part of life down here. We used to have “Art on the Beach” in the early ‘80s, and that was amazing. I performed there once or twice at different events.  And today with all the improvements to the various piers, such as a skate park, mini-golf, and soccer fields, it remains a focus for the community. I’m an avid cyclist and can often be found along the river between the Battery and the George Washington Bridge.

Why did you select Walking Men 99 for the cover imagery?

In some ways the whole album started with the cover photo, and I kind of built it up from there.  A young Canadian photographer took that photo of me in September 2010 during an interview session about legendary Canadian group The Nihilist Spasm Band. When I saw the photo I thought it looked so much like a cool album cover. At that point I only had three or four acoustic demos going, and it remained in the back of my mind that if I ever made enough songs for an album, I’d use that pic as the cover. So that helped push me to develop the songs.

The figures from Maya Barkai’s public artwork cover three sides of a city block with images of the ‘walking man’ symbol as it’s interpreted in 99 different global cities. It’s a beautiful work, and it’s in my neighborhood. I didn’t really realize it at the time, but I like the fact that the cover photo was taken locally, in my ‘hood.  The artwork actually has the names of the various cities over each figure—we had to remove them to put the album title there, but I really liked the image of me walking with all these city names over my head; it felt like an image that reflected the traveling minstrel/touring life.

Walking Men is part of the Downtown Alliance’s ReConstruction program, which adorns construction sites with works of art. What has this program meant to you?

Well, in a neighborhood that’s long been known for housing artists, the program has kept an artistic element on our streets as the neighborhood has grown. There’s so much construction going on in Tribeca and at the World Trade Center site, it’s nice to have some artwork on the streets to keep things lively.

You’re also an artist, and your drawings, prints and videos have been displayed in gallery and museum shows in Slovakia, New Zealand, Utah, and here in New York City. Describe your work for me.

I do sound installations and audio+film installations with my wife, Leah Singer. Sometimes these installations are sites where we do music+film performances as well. We’ve recently done large-scale performance and/or installation works in Brazil, Italy, Canada and Belgium.  I also make ink drawings derived from newspaper imagery.

I like to divorce the images from the stories surrounding them and try to open them up to something more universal. I also make a lot of prints—etchings—and a couple years ago on a residency in Paris I began making use of old vinyl records as “plates” to create prints with, scratching them up and then printing them. They’ve come out very nicely so far, and I plan on making more. They are my “Black Noise” series.

What’s a typical day off in Lower Manhattan like for you?

Often cycling along the river, or coaching soccer with my kids in the fields at Battery Park. A lot of my activities are in the neighborhood; there are many days where I don’t need to leave Tribeca. Often I’ll work at home on projects, or take the PATH across the river to my studio in Hoboken. Sometimes just finding a place to have coffee and meet friends to hang out and chat can be about the most enjoyable thing.

What’s next in your career?

I’m doing a fair bit of touring through the summer on the back of my album, and also pursuing new visual works and new collaborative performance works with Leah. A collection of my poetry and other written work is slated to be released in the fall, from a press in Cambridge, England. I’ve started to work on a new group of songs and hope to find time to record them as well.