The Former Grand Hotel – Viewed from Broadway and…
Godzilla Meets ... Perfume – Broadway at 30th Stre…
The Baudouine Building – Broadway at 28th Street,…
Theme and Variations – Looking Southwest from Broa…
Lion About Town – Broadway at 28th Street, New Yor…
Taking Stock – Broadway at 28th Street, New York,…
The Flatiron Building – Viewed from Broadway at 27…
The Wedge of the Flatiron – Broadway at 22nd Stree…
The Crown of the Flatiron – Broadway at 22nd Stree…
The St. James Building – Broadway at 26th Street,…
The Saint James Building – Broadway at 26th Street…
The Met Life Tower – Viewed from Madison Square Pa…
The New York Life Building – Viewed from Madison S…
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Cherry Blossoms – Madison Square Park, Broadway ne…
Flatiron Plaza – Broadway between 22nd and 23rd St…
Restoration Hardware – Broadway at 22nd Street, Ne…
Within Reach – Broadway at 20th Street, New York,…
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Green Lights – Irving Place at 14th Street, New Yo…
Hare Salon – 14th Street between 2nd and 3rd Avenu…
The Old Streit’s Matzah Bakery – Rivington Street…
Congregation Chasam Sopher – Clinton Street below…
Victoria's Secret – Herald Square, 34th Street and…
Hot Dog Stand – Herald Square, 35th Street and Bro…
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Neckties – Broadway between 38th and 37th Streets,…
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Golda Meir Square – Broadway at 39th Street, New Y…
Looking Differently – Broadway at 39th Street, New…
A New Years Reveller – Transfer Corridor, Times Sq…
Restaurants – Transfer Corridor, Times Square Subw…
A Cut Above – Transfer Corridor, Times Square Subw…
Happy New Year! – Transfer Corridor, Times Square…
Violation – Transfer Corridor, Times Square Subway…
A Chorus Line – Transfer Corridor, Times Square Su…
The Jewel of My Eye – Transfer Corridor, Times Squ…
Subway Strap Hanger – Transfer Corridor, Times Squ…
Theatre Masks – Transfer Corridor, Times Square Su…
Seeing Spots – Transfer Corridor, Times Square Sub…
Uptown Entrance – 41st Street/7th Avenue mezzanine…
Bus Stop to Downtown Brooklyn – Bergen Street near…
Orchids in the Window – Bergen Street near Flatbus…
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On the Street - A Meetup for Flickr Refugee Street Shooters
On the Street - A Meetup for Flickr Refugee Street Shooters
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Where Past is Prologue – Greeley Square, 33rd Street and Broadway, New York, New York


New York City's skyline is dotted with wooden water towers that are easy to mistake for vanishing relics of the bygone era of seltzer bottles and street gas lamps. But what many New Yorkers don't realize is that the towers are hardly antiques. In fact, every day most of them drink and bathe from the water stored in them. This is because most buildings in the city taller than six stories need some sort of water tower and pumping system to provide sufficient water pressure to their tenants.
People mistake wooden for relics of the past because they look as though they are. While many of the towers are older than 30 years of age, even the new ones look old because they too are made of wood that isn’t painted or chemically treated (so as not to taint the drinking water).
Though the technology has become more efficient, the concept of using gravity to deliver water from a wooden tank hasn't changed in decades. And while steel tanks are an option, they are more expensive, don’t provide as much insulation, require more maintenance and take longer to construct. The average wood tank holds 10,000 gallons of water and costs around $30,000. A steel tank of the same size could cost up to $120,000. But different buildings have their own specific needs.
A tank can last 30-35 years depending on its exposure to the elements. Given that most weather systems move from west to east, the rooftop tanks on the west side of Manhattan typically don’t last as long because they take more of a beating. Every year a crew must clean natural sediment from the water from the bottom of the tank. Most buildings have this maintenance done in the spring and summer. Eventually, though, the wood will rot and the tank will start to leak. When this happens, a new tower must be built. With a crew of about six men, an old tank can be torn down and new one constructed in 24 hours. It takes a further two to three hours for pumps to fill them up. When first set up the towers leak, but once filled the wood expands and the tank becomes water tight.
The water towers function like giant toilets. As people use the stored water, the level goes down. A ballcock regulates how much additional water is pumped from the basement.
Who knew?
People mistake wooden for relics of the past because they look as though they are. While many of the towers are older than 30 years of age, even the new ones look old because they too are made of wood that isn’t painted or chemically treated (so as not to taint the drinking water).
Though the technology has become more efficient, the concept of using gravity to deliver water from a wooden tank hasn't changed in decades. And while steel tanks are an option, they are more expensive, don’t provide as much insulation, require more maintenance and take longer to construct. The average wood tank holds 10,000 gallons of water and costs around $30,000. A steel tank of the same size could cost up to $120,000. But different buildings have their own specific needs.
A tank can last 30-35 years depending on its exposure to the elements. Given that most weather systems move from west to east, the rooftop tanks on the west side of Manhattan typically don’t last as long because they take more of a beating. Every year a crew must clean natural sediment from the water from the bottom of the tank. Most buildings have this maintenance done in the spring and summer. Eventually, though, the wood will rot and the tank will start to leak. When this happens, a new tower must be built. With a crew of about six men, an old tank can be torn down and new one constructed in 24 hours. It takes a further two to three hours for pumps to fill them up. When first set up the towers leak, but once filled the wood expands and the tank becomes water tight.
The water towers function like giant toilets. As people use the stored water, the level goes down. A ballcock regulates how much additional water is pumped from the basement.
Who knew?
Pano ☼ Rapi ♫✯♫, Ronald Stachowiak have particularly liked this photo
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