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15 votes
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Atlantic Aviation preparing Manhattan Heliport for electric air taxis
5 votes -
Catbus Collective - Shiki no Uta (from Samurai Champloo) (Live at Clement’s Place) (2024)
4 votes -
America’s first cross-country auto race
2 votes -
Barcelona is turning subway trains into power stations
13 votes -
That collective feeling - The rise and fall of New York clubbing
7 votes -
Sub Urban - Skinny Loser (2024)
1 vote -
NYPD officer lands $175K settlement over ‘courtesy cards’ that help drivers get out of traffic stops
54 votes -
9/11 attacks in realtime (dashboard) 7:46am-12:00pm
23 votes -
Charly Bliss - Calling You Out (2024)
3 votes -
More on American incuriosity, New York regional rail edition, Part 1: European history
10 votes -
Giant pigeon to loom over New York
23 votes -
The strange origin story behind Akira's megacity, Neo Tokyo
12 votes -
MTA stops work on Second Ave. subway amid congestion pricing confusion
14 votes -
When dozens of migrant students arrived in Rotterdam, New York, the local school district scrambled to adapt
10 votes -
New York Governor Kathy Hochul’s decision to suspend congestion pricing is absurd
33 votes -
New York passes legislation that would ban 'addictive' social media algorithms for kids
51 votes -
The case for NYC's congestion pricing
5 votes -
The bridges of New York City
6 votes -
Manhattan co-op in crisis spearheads push to cap land rent hikes
10 votes -
From Run DMC to Jay-Z: Hip-hop's history, told through bling
11 votes -
Tiny electric trucks are coming to a bike lane near you
18 votes -
Nathan Berman has helped rescue Manhattan’s financial district from a “doom loop” by carving attractive living spaces from hulking buildings that once housed fields of cubicles
16 votes -
Paul Auster, the patron saint of literary Brooklyn, dies at 77
15 votes -
New York appeals court overturns Harvey Weinstein’s 2020 rape conviction from landmark #MeToo trial [he will remain imprisoned in California and the court has ordered a retrial]
25 votes -
New Jersey is motivating telecommuters to appeal their New York tax bills. Connecticut may be next.
13 votes -
The “bad nanny” wars
7 votes -
Matteo Lane at the MET Opera with Nadine Sierra
2 votes -
Restaurant advice Astoria, Queens, NYC
My wife and I will be traveling to NY in early April. I already have our "nice" dinners planned at Osteria 57 in Greenwich Village and Peak NYC at Hudson Yards. If, for some reason, I should...
My wife and I will be traveling to NY in early April. I already have our "nice" dinners planned at Osteria 57 in Greenwich Village and Peak NYC at Hudson Yards. If, for some reason, I should absolutely avoid these two places...please let me know.
We need to loosely plan dinner for the other two nights. These two nights shouldn't be as expensive as the two nights above :). Both of these nights we'd like to eat closer to Astoria, where we will be staying (roughly 28th and 38th). We'll be close to Richmond Hill one of these days, so would be open to eating down there as well before returning back to Astoria.
Could you suggest a great pizza place where we could sit down and have salad and pizza?
how about a traditional Indian restaurant? Not a fusion and not some place where someone tries to do something fancy. A place I can get Chicken Tikka Masala and my wife can find Chana Masala.
Some other place that isn't Indian or pizza, but is an absolute must in Astoria?
Thank you New Yorkers!
12 votes -
4.8 earthquake in central New Jersey; felt in Philadelphia, New York
Comment box Scope: personal anecdote Tone: neutral Opinion: yes? Sarcasm/humor: none I assume everyone in the New York/New Jersey/eastern PA/maybe northern Delaware area just felt their buildings...
Comment box
- Scope: personal anecdote
- Tone: neutral
- Opinion: yes?
- Sarcasm/humor: none
I assume everyone in the New York/New Jersey/eastern PA/maybe northern Delaware area just felt their buildings shaking.
That was a 4.8 magnitude earthquake originating near Lebanon, NJ (a ways west of Edison). You can look at the details from the US government's earthquake tracking website.
I've never felt an earthquake before, so that was something. I thought the people above me had turned on a motorcycle or something. I had no clue what could shake the building like that. Then it dawned on me. Not the place you expect these things. (I'm sure the Californians find this cute!)
35 votes -
The hotel guest who wouldn’t leave
25 votes -
Donald Trump's lawyers say it is impossible for him to post bond covering $454 million US civil fraud judgment
64 votes -
Cal-Mex is having a moment in New York. But how does it taste?
8 votes -
Maps: see how the Interborough Express could unlock new opportunities for New York City
4 votes -
Wood apple - I finally found a good one and it tastes... special
13 votes -
New York midwife fined for giving 1,500 children homeopathic pellets instead of vaccines
42 votes -
New York City subways' ancient signaling systems keep trains going slow – but that's about to change
18 votes -
New York governor sends national guard to subway in crime crackdown
21 votes -
The endangered languages of New York
16 votes -
$1 billion donation will provide free tuition at a Bronx medical school
21 votes -
The battle for Central Park
3 votes -
The 355 million dollar US civil fraud ruling against Donald Trump, annotated
30 votes -
New York City plans to wipe out $2 billion in medical debt for 500,000 residents
27 votes -
The tragic story of this famous meteorite and the boy who fought the museum that took everything from him
14 votes -
No one's names were changed at Ellis Island
41 votes -
New York City finishes protected bus lane designs in downtown Brooklyn
13 votes -
The three-decade saga that led to the Crown Heights tunnels
13 votes -
A secret tunnel in a NYC synagogue leads to a brawl between police and worshippers
50 votes -
My new apartment’s most aggravating feature (latch smart locks)
50 votes -
My thoughts: Maple Leaf train between New York City and Toronto
I recently took the Amtrak/Via Rail "Maple Leaf" train all the way from New York City, NY, USA to Toronto, ON, Canada. It took about 13 hours each way. I had taken portions of this route before...
I recently took the Amtrak/Via Rail "Maple Leaf" train all the way from New York City, NY, USA to Toronto, ON, Canada. It took about 13 hours each way. I had taken portions of this route before but never the whole thing. There is only one trip each direction per day. It stops at several points in the US and Canada.
I was pleased with the journey even though I would have preferred the train to run at twice the speed it did. It was a beautiful and scenic ride punctuated by a number of historic cities. The Amtrak personnel on longer-distance routes like this are particularly pleasant, funny, and personable.
- NYC (Penn) to Albany–Rensselaer (~150 miles): about 2.5 hours on paper plus a slightly excessive wait at the Albany station (which is quite nice, through located nowhere near Albany proper). I believe this time is used to change the locomotive. This was the most gorgeous part of the trip by far: the train follows the east side of the Hudson River for the entire stretch and you have a constant view of the Palisades across the water. This is the fastest part of the journey. Going north, you want to be on the left side of the train; going south, the right (but it gets dark early this time of year).
- Albany–Rensselaer to Canadian border (~300 miles): about 6.5 hours on paper. Here, the train turns to meet each of the western cities, including Schenectady, Utica, Rome, Syracuse, Rochester, and Buffalo (twice). This segment isn't as scenic as the Hudson, but it takes you through a lot of farm country, which is nice to look at too. The train's average speed along this route is considerably slower than the southern section. I assume this is because there are more at-grade crossings or some track alignment slowdowns.
- Canadian border to Toronto (Union) (~80 miles): about 2 hours on paper. Not the most aesthetically pleasing section of the route, and dark for me going north. The train runs abysmally slowly in this section both because there are a lot of stops in short intervals and more importantly because there are an absurd number of at-grade crossings throughout the route, plus, I assume, various engineering-based speed restrictions from windy track alignments. But Union Station is a gorgeous building and very easy to navigate. Connections to the UP Express and subway are trivial.
You'll notice that the times I listed don't add up to 13 hours, the full length of the trip (on paper). This was because the train stops for an irritating amount of time at the border, the only part I didn't like, which unnecessarily adds ~2 hours to the trip. What happens is:
- Amtrak personnel provide you a customs declaration form to fill out about 30 minutes before you arrive at Niagara Falls. Have a pen handy.
- Train stops at the Niagara Falls, NY (NFL) station for upwards of 45 minutes, nominally so that the border control agents can "get ready" to receive you. Why they did not prepare during the 10+ hours they had all day I could not say. If you're crossing the border, you do not get out here, but wait until the train starts moving again.
- Train goes to the Niagara Falls, ON (NFS) station in about 5 minutes. Now you disembark with all luggage and walk into the building for security screening. On the Canadian side, they just ask you a couple questions: no complex screening. It took about 15 minutes. Then, for some indecipherable reason, they direct you outside the station and instruct you to walk around and go into the main entrance to wait. (Yes, truly magnificent routing.)
- You sit in their waiting room for at least 30 minutes with the other passengers. The reason you are waiting is so that they can search the entire train for contraband. When finished, you are ushered back on board. The business class passengers reboard the train (the same train) first, then coach passengers. The rest of the trip is operated by Via Rail. (Note: you don't have to buy anything from Via except maybe if you are starting in Ontario and going to Toronto. Amtrak's ticket covers the whole route from the US and back.)
Going from Canada to the US, the process is basically the same, except that the Americans force you to go through an airport-style bag screening check, which I consider utterly redundant. They also have multiple dogs sniffing you for drugs (I assume). The dogs are cute, but do not touch, for they are deadly creatures hard at work. All the scanning and sniffing and waiting takes at least 45 minutes to an hour. Thankfully you can keep your shoes on. I'm a US citizen with TSA Pre-Check and whatnot, so they don't give me trouble with the security questions, but they have no problem interrogating people for a long time and painstakingly searching multiple bags because the dog thought it smelled a piece of bacon.
It is an incredibly stupid and unnecessary process. Bags are not scanned when driving through the border by car. Dogs do not sniff your belongings and person when driving by car. You do not have to exit your car, take out all your belongings, and sit around in a waiting room for an hour when driving by car. Frankly airport security is faster than this was. It's no wonder this train isn't the preferred method of travel!
Despite the pointless border security, the trip was enjoyable and I will do it again the next time I visit Toronto from New York. It was also cheaper than flying at the time I booked it: ~$134 in coach (minus 10% for my Rail Passengers Association discount! So really $121) vs. ~$185 for a one-way flight (when I was looking). I think if you book far enough in advance, you can get a flight for as little as $90, but you usually have to fly out of LaGuardia or JFK for the cheap tickets, which are the worst airports known to mankind and also are not on the NEC. LGA is particularly hard to access. (I almost always fly out of Newark for these reasons.)
It does take... the entire day, though. So you have to treat it more like an experience than strictly transit. If you have friends in upstate New York, this is a good opportunity to visit for a night or two!
32 votes