City of Stars
A New Yorker’s Guide to the Cosmos
Natural History special issue
Introduction
What if I were raised somewhere other than in New York City? What if had grown up on a dark rural farm, with a nighttime sky filled with stars? In this imagined life as a farmer’s child, I don’t suppose that I would have ever noticed the stars, just as New Yorkers never notice tall buildings. Rarely are we moved emotionally by that which we take for granted.
During a fourth grade trip to the Hayden Planetarium, I noticed the stars for the first time. And I am now an urban astrophysicist, through and through. To this day, when I travel to observatories on high mountains, and I see the sky with a clarity that rivals views from space, I think to myself, “It reminds me of the Hayden Planetarium.”
In spite of the Planetarium’s profound influence on me and on millions more, the day-to-day life of a New Yorker can remain a sky-starved existence unless you know where to look. References to the cosmos actually abound in the city and are generously sprinkled throughout the boroughs in the form of sculptures, decorations, architectural forms, and store-fronts. These abundant cosmic references give fresh meaning to the New Yorker’s conceit that we live at the center of the universe.
Photoessays
Grand Central Terminal
Armillary Spheres
Bronx High School of Science
Daily News Building
Unisphere
Subway
Rose Center for Earth and Space
Restaurants & Shops
Murphy Center
Islamic Cultural Center
Black Hole
Earth Model
The Starry Night
Saint Paul’s Church
United Nations
Prometheus
Atlas
Cathedral of St. John the Divine
Sun Triangle
Manhattanhenge
New York Hall of Science
Sunset on the World Trade Center