NYC Grid is a photo blog dedicated to exploring New York block-by-block and corner-by-corner. Updated every weekday, each post covers a new street with a focus on the mundane and ephemeral.

  

Entries in Koreatown (2)

Wednesday
Jul152009

32nd St Between 5th Ave and Broadway

This bustling and exciting street, known as Korea Way, is the center of Koreatown. Sitting near the Empire State Building and Herald Square, the block has a massive amount of traffic flowing in both directions.

Even though there's no escaping chain businesses – such as Pinkberry, CVS and Citibank – the majority of the block is still over-run with local, Korean-run places. The diversity of offerings – including restaurants, bars, clubs, karaoke bars, grocery stores – is staggering, and they don't stop at the ground floor. Many places sit two, three or even four stories off street level. This creates for a unique landscape of signs towering above the street...not too unlike Times Square.

Most of the buildings here are older and have magnificent detailing all the way to the top. If you can find a clear spot on the sidewalk, it's worth it to glance upward.

This one block is so full of goodies, it even warrants it's own Wikipedia article.

Tuesday
Jun162009

34th St Between 8th Ave and 7th Ave

Steps away from the massive, curved exterior of Madison Sqaure Garden this part of 34th St is home to both unrelenting commerce, and unimaginable crap. The southern half of the street has the NYC staples of Duane Reade, the subway, LIRR, and an office tower; while the northern side is home to store after store selling clothes, jewelry and shoes. These (assumedly) mom & pop operations seem to have their days numbered, though, as many of them were announcing "Going Out Of Business" in their windows.

However, for each local business going under, there seems to be some crummy chain taking it's place (Payless, TGI-Friday's) – so I wouldn't worry about the area's vibe changing too much in the coming years.

You don't quite get the tourist-y rush here – it's about one block too far for them, with Macy's residing between 6th and 7th – but there's still a pretty sizable crush of people making their way on the sidewalk. The street vendors, construction canopies, newstands and massive planters don't help either.