Showing posts with label Q train. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Q train. Show all posts

Saturday, April 15, 2017

Q: 96th Street, Manhattan

Tuesday, March 21, 2017

It's been almost three years. At this rate, the project might never be possible because new stations open faster than we visit the existing ones. I might learn Chinese from fortune cookies before I explore all the city's subway line ends. But it doesn't matter. It's the journey, right?

New York State has completed at least two major subway expansions in the last few years: the 7 train extension west to Hudson Yards and the Q train expansion up Second Avenue. I wrote  "New York City" at first, but then I remembered the state runs the MTA, which runs the city's subways. They sure feel like a city program. I might have said city in past posts. Forgive me, Albany. In any case, the Second Avenue expansion, which was proposed 98 years ago, is theoretically only the first step of a larger project, but it's already carrying 200,000 passengers every day. You don't want to know how much it cost. Since it opened January 1, lots of my friends have posted photos of station art by Chuck Close (who I just found out has prosopagnosia!) and other artists. I figured I'd be needing to ride it soon enough, but it turns out I just don't get to the Upper East Side that much. Damaso, on the other hand, actually needed to be up there for some reason, so that's the station we chose.

His sojourn in Barcelona ended a while ago, and he'd moved back to the city and gotten a full-time job at the News Literacy Project, for whom he had volunteered in the past. I can't imagine anything more timely. He mostly works from his home on the Upper West Side though, so he had some timing flexibility but not enough to trek out to the far reaches of the Bronx or whatever, so exploring the new Q terminus would be perfect.

The outside of my subway car was filled with gorgeous but disconcerting graphics celebrating the new line. Gorgeous because of their simplicity and color but disconcerting because letters appear in colored circles, but not according to the subway color-letter codes that every New Yorker knows. For example, the final "AY" of "SECOND AVENUE SUBWAY" appear in a green circle, but everyone in Brooklyn and Queens knows a green circle means the "G" train. The inside of the train is also entirely devoted to itself: "We've been anxiously waiting for this to open. It feels great," says "Zen Master Samu Sunim, Zen Buddhist Temple, Upper East Side" on one poster. On another, "Irene Nesbit, Upper East Side resident" states breathlessly, "We're a great city and we need great transportation like the Second Avenue subway will deliver."

Besides the city denizens quoted on the posters, the car is full of commuters who don't look quite as breathless or excited. The bench next to me is occupied by a sleeping man with one foot in a walking boot. Having spent quite a bit of time in walking boots over the course of two foot surgeries, I'm sympathetic. Plus, he doesn't even smell.

We agreed to meet at the uptown edge of the platform at the last stop. Another major change since the last time we did this is that the MTA now provides free wifi and cell service at every station in the city, so we knew it would be easy to find each other. I exited a few minutes early into the wide, open platform. It doesn't look like one of the old stations with the I-beam pillars, but it doesn't look particularly interesting either. It just looks like a Metro North or Long Island Rail Road station. I walk to the front of the platform and discover the escalator is out of service. I wonder whether it is already broken or hasn't been fully installed yet.

The next train arrives, and I see Damaso about half way down the platform walking away from me taking pictures. I walk towards him, and he says he's been there a while. Not like us to both arrive early.


Platform 

Tracks 

Train 

Q train 

Q signs (but not a Q-sign) 

The art in this station is by Sarah Sze, but at first it doesn't grab me. It's a mural or mosaic of what looks like white pieces of paper blowing around on a blue background. As we ascend from the platform, the wall around the staircase bears a more attractive blue and white image. The colors make it look like a blueprint, but the image doesn't look architectural. I don't stay to figure it out. I was vaguely disappointed that the subway tiles aren't subway tiles.

Station art 

Station sign 

We exit to the broad expanse of upper Second Avenue and walk, as usual, in the direction the train was going. Ahead of us, we see the barren expanse of Metropolitan Hospital, and Damaso says the city's best tamale vendor is often there. He says he's been getting into tamales, and this woman makes particularly moist ones. I, on the other hand, am almost always disappointed by tamales, because no matter what exotic fillings they advertise, they're mostly just corn meal. There used to be a tamale shop by my old apartment on West 14th Street that identified its tamales by purported country of origin. I can't remember any of the specifics, but I remember that I never believed the fillings had anything to do with those countries. For example, maybe Guatemala was raisins, goat, and cumin and Ecuador was chicken, olives, and sun-dried tomatoes. I'm just making up those correlations, but I do remember raisins, goat, olives, and Guatemala were all represented. And I do love street food, although for some reason I feel like the project demands sitting down and taking our time somewhere.

When we get to the hospital entrance, there are female tamale vendors on either side of the gate, and Damaso doesn't recognize his source. He remembers that she used green banana leaves and her tamales were moistest. He approaches one vendor and asks, in Spanish, whether she has tamales. She tells him she has spicy chicken and non-spicy chicken. He translates for me, which amuses me because when I visited him in Barcelona, I was still translating for him. Fair to guess his Spanish has overtaken mine in the intervening years. He gets a spicy chicken tamale, and it comes in a green wrapper.

Q station 

Second Ave 

Tamales 

Since we still don't know which is the good vendor, and admittedly because I'm thinking that they're all probably exactly the same or if they aren't, any of them are as likely as any other to be good, I order from the other vendor, who has chicken with mole or chicken with green sauce. I ask for the green sauce, and my tamale comes wrapped in yellow banana leaves. Uh-oh. I take a bite, and it's almost exactly what I expected. Well, the tamale part is exactly what I expected, a dry mush of cornmeal with a tiny bit of chicken inside. Not exciting. The part that's unexpected is that the chicken has neither green sauce nor mole. Just chicken. Damaso says his vendor is definitely the good one. I'm defiantly sure they're exactly the same, but then we trade bites.

He's right.

His tamale is delicious. It still has the drawbacks of a tamale, meaning it's mostly all corn meal, but the corn meal is grainy and moist, steaming in the banana leaves and quite flavorful. He offers me more, but I just finish mine even though I don't really like it that much.

We  circle north of the hospital and walk east towards the East River, thinking we might find someplace nice along the water, but we're cruelly disabused. The landscape is barren and industrial. We don't bother to walk all the way to the FDR, but we head back on First Avenue and hope we can find something on 96th Street. Nope. Back to Second Ave, where we finally decide on Vinus and Marc, which I see now described on its Google blurb as a "stylish, clubby venue pairing craft cocktails & wine with elevated French-Latin fusion plates," but which we walked into because it said "bistro" and then we immediately wondered what made it a bistro. Mostly it serves burgers.

The restaurant was long and narrow and fairly dark, with a wood bar along one side and a red wall with giant mirrors on the other.  We sat at a round four-top in the front window. I have no idea how someone would have gotten into the chairs facing in, I guess they would have had to pull out the other two chairs and the table, but since we were the only ones there, we sat facing out, with the empty chairs between us and the windows. My unsweetened iced tea was huge, which made me happy, and cloudy, which made me nervous is was coffee or lattéed or something, but the waitress said it always got cloudy from being in the refrigerator, and that made me happier because it meant it wasn't newly brewed hot tea watered down and still tepid, which is what I'm often brought.

I'm supposed to be on a diet, but I never seem to eat differently or less. Damaso, as usual, said he was trying to eat better but unlike me he actually does something about it and ordered a house salad, so I did that too. He didn't even get any shrimp or chicken or whatever on it, so I didn't either, but all I could think was that it wasn't going to be enough food and that I'd be hungry. The salads were lovely with red onions, carrots, and cucumbers on a bed of mixed greens under a semi sweet house vinaigrette. I could have eaten five of them. I reminded myself that I'd just had a tamale, which together made it a reasonably sized lunch.

Salad 

Iced tea 

The waitress, who was lovely, gave me a free refill of my giant iced tea. She had a little speck of something green on one tooth, and I debated whether to tell her. My rule, instilled at a young age by Miss Manners is never to tell people when you notice problems they aren't likely to be able to fix (mismatched shoes, run in stocking) but always to tell people about things they can do something about, but while spinach in teeth falls squarely in the latter camp, the combination of stranger and server threw me off, and I didn't say anything. Nobody else came into the restaurant while we were there anyway, and it was on my side, so I doubt Damaso could even see it. Yes, I'm rationalizing. If I have spinach on my teeth please tell me. But see, now you know what I prefer, so I'm making it more comfortable. Oops, rationalizing again.

Anyway, we didn't linger long. Mr. Newly Employed graciously tried to pay for our lunch after, but I didn't let him. He headed off to find a print shop, and I decided to wander slowly down to Bryant Park to meet the Tuesday after-work juggle. The walk was fantastic, but that's a whole other story. Let's just say it was the first (and last for a while) beautiful day of spring.

Photographs by Damaso Reyes

Sunday, February 24, 2013

NQ: Astoria/Ditmars Boulevard, Queens

Tuesday, August 9, 2011 You Are Here: Astoria It’s been almost five months since our last trip, during which time Damaso has been living in Barcelona. I was sure that by the time he got back I’d have viveca.net up and have started publishing these stories. I’m a little sheepish to see him again without any progress to report. My only defense is that I have been riding my web programmer to help me get started, and I haven’t given up. In any case, I hate quitting in the middle of something, and equally relevantly, even if nobody else were ever going to read any of this, I want to see the rest of the city! We meet in Astor Place and ride the N uptown into Queens. The ride isn’t long. When we get off the elevated tracks at Astoria/Ditmars Boulevard, it’s raining and hot. The tracks run over a busy thoroughfare with plenty of culinary options. Damaso spies a transit worker and asks him for a recommendation, but the MTA employee says he brings his own lunch. Like us, he lives in Brooklyn. When pressed, he says the other guys eat at the diner, and he gestures vaguely across the street at Mike’s Diner. We stay on our side and walk to the end of the block, peering into a Southwest-style place and weighing options. Nothing is appealing. We cross and walk back towards Mike’s Diner, but right before we reach it, we notice the Last Stop Restaurant, which fits our theme too well to bypass. Last Stop Cafe Cafe Sticker on Map Inside, our thought process is rewarded. The entire café is decorated with a subway and train theme—the name is posted in tiles, toy trains line the counters, train art hangs over the tables, and two walls are painted as a subway car exterior (N train) with passengers peering out through the windows. Facing us are a conductor, a wary mother, and a smiling daughter peering out of the end of the train mural. Damaso asks me to make a face as though I’m running away from the train barreling towards me. He takes a few pictures of my attempts to act, but I only look crazier in each one. I know these would be better if I were willing to include pictures of myself in them, but my vanity rebels. This photo goes beyond unflattering to ridiculous though, so maybe I’ll let it slip through. N train mural Painted N train Running from painted train The air conditioning is freezing against our wet clothes, and the man behind the counter graciously turns it down for us. I had just given Damaso a bunch of t-shirts, and he hands me one back to use as a shawl while we peruse the menus. Nothing appeals, and I particularly don’t want any of the Last Stop Specials. Damaso wants to order a burger but doesn’t want me to mock him for it. He often hears judgment when I think I’m stating facts, and I’m slightly sad that my commenting on him liking to order the same things made him feel insulted as unadventurous. Worse, I worry that we’re experiencing some sort of social Heisenbergism, which of course doesn’t exist. But just as social Darwinism falsely extends evolutionary theory to behavior activity, I apply the uncertainty principle to this project: measuring (or documenting) an activity changes it in ways that prevent it from being measured accurately. It’s ridiculous. There is no “real” End of the Line experience, and Damaso changing his order doesn’t hurt anyone. T-shirt shawl In any case, he decides to get a turkey burger, “to mix it up,” and I eventually order a chicken parmigiana sub, because the waitress says it’s her favorite, and a side of broccoli because I gained a ton of weight traveling recently, and I’m convinced that eating extra vegetables, even if smothered in oil, will magically make me thin. While we sit, a man follows a wandering toddler around the restaurant. They seem to belong here. Maybe he works in the restaurant, or maybe they’ve finished eating and just don’t want to face the rain. Damaso keeps trying to say hello to the child. He or she, I can’t tell, stares back for a while but is blissfully unresponsive. Salt & pepper When our food arrives, “thin” leaves the building. My “sandwich” is served open faced, with chicken, sauce, and cheese oozing over the sides of a giant toasted hero roll. Damaso’s large burger comes with a heaping helping of battered French fries, and my broccoli could feed a dozen schoolchildren if children ate vegetables soaked in fresh garlic and olive oil. The broccoli is still green, not too mushy, and delicious. The rest of the food is, well, adequate. I eat the toppings and leave the bread on the platter. The waitress won’t give me a refill on my iced tea, and I’m sulky and spoiled after six weeks out of NYC. Iced tea runs freely in the rest of the country, but it’s a precious commodity here. Turkey Burger Broccoli Chicken parmesan sub Outside we cross to a bakery whose interior is much less appealing than its appearance but which smells fantastic. Somehow convincing myself that buying food here will help me avoid eating restaurant food and therefore that this will actually help me lose weight, I buy a loaf of olive bread and two almond cookies, one plain and one dipped in chocolate. I promise myself that I won’t eat the cookies until I finish an overdue article draft and write this up. That was four days ago. I threw out most of the bread today, but I finished the other project a few hours ago, and when I finish the next sentence I’ll go retrieve the cookies from the fridge. I hope they’re not too stale.

Photographs by Damaso Reyes