1.22.2012

Kaleidoscopic New York

More fun with the Stereographic Street View hack. As it turns out, you can do a lot more than just make those cute little mini-planets. Long, low buildings, for example, can be fun to play around with. Here we are at Industry City in Sunset Park, Brooklyn:

































And, up at Viñoly's razzle-dazzle-y Hall of Justice in the Bronx:

































Skyscrapers are fun for the same reason. Here's Manhattan's GM Building (and Apple's famous Cube store):

































And Long Island City's Citi Tower, warped into something of a crooked frame:

































In fact, with the right site, these stereographic images can start to look like legit abstract art:
































And then, of course, there's the straight-up kaleidoscopic stuff. Here's the old American Banknote Building in Hunts Point:

































One of the covered sections of the High Line, near 14th Street:

































Under the 1 tracks up in Kingsbridge:

































Pier Luigi Nervi's magnificently weird bus terminal in Washington Heights:
































Inside the Met (three cheers for Street View inside major museums!)































And last, but certainly not least, on the Brooklyn Bridge:

































If anybody plays around with this thing and finds some more worth sharing, please do!

1.21.2012

Stereographic New York

Thanks to Brainpicker for alerting me to the presence of what may be the best Google Maps hack I've seen yet, Stereographic Street View. Now I know what I'm going to be doing for pretty much the rest of my life. Some early successes:

Under the Queensboro Bridge in LIC:

































Then on down to Soho:

































And Flatbush. The uniformity of public housing blocks makes for some really great stereographic images:


































And speaking of uniform residential architecture, Fort Greene's Portland Avenue lends itself well to this format:




































As does the Greystones block of 80th Street in Jackson Heights, Queens:

































Then, on to fun with interestingly-shaped landmarks. The Bronx's Kingsbridge Armory:

































The Newtown Creek Wastewater Treatment Plant in Greenpoint:


































The New Museum:

































The Whit:































And the Gugg:

































The patchy quality of much of Google's Street View imagery means that a lot of stuff gets a little blurry around the edges, but the site is still terrifyingly addictive. If you enjoyed this post, stop back tomorrow for some more abstract fare...