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  • 18
    Feb
    2013
    1:09pm, EST

    Lonely Lady Liberty awaits tourists and repairs after Sandy

    John Makely / NBC News

    A police officer makes his rounds at the Statue of Liberty National Monument which has been been closed since Hurricane Sandy.

    John Makely / NBC News

    Superintendent David Luchsinger walks along the pathways damaged by Hurricane Sandy on Liberty Island. Luchsinger and his wife were residents of the island when the storm hit in October 2012.

    John Makely / NBC News

    Much of the brick pathway on Liberty Island damaged by the storm will be replaced with larger pavers.

    John Makely / NBC News

    Ruined spotlights that once illuminated the Statue of Liberty need replacement.

    By Andrew Rafferty, NBC News

    The Statue of Liberty no longer towers over huddled masses these days. Instead, at her feet sit atop dumpsters filled with debris, piles of dirt and bricks ripped from the walkway that once led tourists around Liberty Island.

    More than three months after Hurricane Sandy devastated parts of New York and New Jersey, the symbol of American exceptionalism still stands on an island full of rubble. Lady Liberty escaped the storm unharmed, but like so many Sandy victims, her home was destroyed. About 75 percent of Liberty Island was submerged. Nearly all the island’s infrastructure was destroyed by water that was more than five feet deep over some parts of the 12-acre island.

    Neighboring Ellis Island has no upended sidewalks or debris anymore, but it will take a long time to repair the electrical system and infrastructure of the sprawling complex that welcomed 12 million immigrants to America.

    Both islands have been closed indefinitely to visitors.

    Despite the visible disarray, officials say they have recently turned a corner. The cleanup is largely complete, the damage is documented, and some relief money will soon start coming in to begin repairing millions of dollars worth of damage. Details of a final plan for the parks reopening will likely come within the next two weeks, according to park officials. They are hopeful the Statue of Liberty will be open by summer.

    But not knowing when Lady Liberty will welcome visitors again has caused frustrations, both for those who work in the park and for politicians who view the landmark as a revenue source for the New York economy. Earlier this month, Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y. asked the Department of the Interior to set a hard and fast timetable for reopening the statue.

    "The Statue of Liberty is still shuttered more than three months after Sandy struck the city and tourists, businesses and all New Yorkers need to know that the end is in sight," read a statement released by Schumer this month.

    The National Parks Service and the vendors that cater to the island stand to lose at least several million dollars in ticket, concession and souvenir sales, park officials estimate. They've already lost two of their busiest times of the year -- Thanksgiving and Christmas. Even on a cold February day between 7,000 to 8,000 people will brave the Hudson River to view some of America's best known landmarks. As the weather gets warmer, everything gets busier. Last year the Statue of Liberty welcomed 3.7 million visitors.

    John Makely / NBC News

    Millions of dollars in revenue are lost with the closure of the popular tourist destination.

    John Makely / NBC News

    A tour boat passes the heavily damaged auxiliary dock on Liberty Island.

    Those numbers are not lost on David Luchsinger, superintendent of the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island. He understands the toll that the prolonged closure has taken on the 450 employees and contractors who worked at the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island before Sandy.

    John Makely / NBC News

    Hurricane Sandy inundated Ellis Island, flooding all the basements where most of the mechanical systems operated. Ellis Island will probably take longer to open than Liberty Island.

    “We want it opened as soon as Sen. Schumer and everybody else does, and we're going to get it open as quickly as we can, and we're hoping that by the summertime we'll at least have the Statue of Liberty back open,” Luchsinger said.

    But Luchsinger's focus has been not only on rebuilding, but improving. Before coming to New York, Luchsinger spent three years in Louisiana helping the recovery effort from Hurricane Katrina and getting through Hurricane Gustav and Ike.  And for him, attention needs to be placed not only on repairing, but on preparing so that when the next storm hits, this type of devastation will not occur. That means elevating electrical and HVAC systems to prevent flooding from knocking them out again and looking into putting a gas line underground to Liberty Island.

    "That's what's taking so long, we want to make sure that when we put things back, we put them back the right way," said Luschsinger.

    For most of the past three months, the superintendent has had the task of telling media, members of government and the public that no timetable exists. Just this week, the Department of Transportation announced $28 million in emergency relief funding that will partially go toward repairing Liberty Island's two docks.

    "The tourist season means jobs and customers - and we want to help make sure popular parks and tourist destinations in New York and New Jersey are as accessible as possible and open for business," Federal Highway Administrator Victor Mendez said in a statement.

    The announcement set off a new round of speculation that Lady Liberty could be open to the public by Memorial Day. But Luchsinger, thanking the Department of Transportation for the aid, said that "the many other necessary repairs" will keep the park closed indefinitely.

    Also, it took 91 days after the storm hit Oct. 29 for Congress to pass a $50.5 billion relief package.

    After Hurricane Sandy swamped both The Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island much work remains according to Superintendent David Luchsinger, who also lost his residence in the storm.

    "Now that Congress has given us the funding, you know, we're in a position to start making things happen finally," said Luchsinger. But he is quick to point his team did not wait for a check to get to work. Almost as soon the storm moved out, the cleanup effort began. An incident command team took to the islands, working out of their cars.

    While progress is slow but sure on Liberty Island, much larger Ellis Island will take well beyond summer to get up and running. The silver lining is that none of museum’s more than one million artifacts was lost. After the storm, the valuables were shipped to a museum archival center in Landover, Maryland, and there are no plans in place for bringing them back anytime soon.

    Many of the employees who worked on Ellis Island and the surrounding parks now operate out of Federal Hall, still without phone lines.

    Members of the parks department were getting ready to celebrate in the days leading up to Sandy. For the past year, the interior of the monument had been closed for a $30 million renovation that made it more accessible to visitors with disabilities. On Oct. 27, the monument's 126th birthday, visitors were again able to peek through Lady Liberty's crown. Thankfully, since there was no damage to the statue during the storm, none of the new renovation will need repair.

    "The secretary [of the Interior Department] and I were celebrating one day and crying in our beer the second," joked Luchsinger. "But I know this park will come back, and I know it will be better than it was."

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    John Makely / NBC News

    The Registration Room at the Ellis Island Immigration Museum. While the building is intact, all of the mechanical systems in the basement were heavily damaged.

    John Makely / NBC News

    Until the building can be adequately climate-controlled, most of the artifacts that were on display in the Ellis Island Immigration Museum have been removed and archived in Maryland for safe-keeping.

    John Makely / NBC News

    A vacant wing of the Ellis Island Immigration Museum.

    John Makely / NBC News

    Slideshow: Recovering after Sandy

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    107 comments

    Well Mr. Boehner, actions and no action does have consequences after all doesn't it? Such a shame, its bad enough people in the northeast had to wait how many months just to bring up funds for Sandy relief for a vote and probably still wouldn't have been brought up for a vote if he had not been call …

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  • 15
    Feb
    2013
    7:30pm, EST

    Spectacular star trails dazzle over Bulgaria

    Vassil Donev / EPA

    epa03586135 A 25-minute-long exposure shows stars trailing across the sky over a chapel near Sofia, Bulgaria, 15 February 2013. EPA/VASSIL DONEV

    A 25-minute-long exposure shows stars trailing across the sky over a chapel near Sofia, Bulgaria, 15 February 2013.

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  • 8
    Feb
    2013
    3:27pm, EST

    From cubicle to Carnival: A samba dancer keeps her day job

    Felipe Dana / AP

    Samba dancer Diana Prado, right, adjusts her costume as she prepares for a carnival parade at central station in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on Feb. 2.

    Felipe Dana / AP

    Samba dancer and as a call center supervisor Diana Prado talks with a co-worker, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on Feb. 5.

    Slideshow: Brazil's carnival celebrations

    Pilar Olivares / Reuters

    A reveller participates in the annual block party known as the "Banda de Ipanema

    Launch slideshow

    Published 3:30pm ET -- Though samba dancers, or "passistas," as they're known in Portuguese, are unquestionably the star attractions of the world's most iconic Carnival celebrations, they're not on the payroll of the samba school they represent. Diana Prado made her Carnival debut at age 19, after auditioning for a spot with the Sao Clemente, one of 13 top-tier schools that will compete for the annual titles at the Sambadrome this weekend.

    Prado spends her daylight hours working at a call center. At night, she is a samba dancer for the Sao Clemente group. Although her hectic schedule of pre-Carnival preparations often requires her to apply her extravagant glitter stage makeup in the office bathroom, Prado insists being a "passista" doesn't undermine her authority with the 15 telemarketers she supervises.

    -- The Associated Press

    Felipe Dana / AP

    Samba dancer and a call center supervisor Diana Prado sits at her work desk, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on Feb. 5.

    Felipe Dana / AP

    Samba dancer Diana Prado does her makeup before the start of a carnival parade at central station in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on Feb. 2.

    Felipe Dana / AP

    Samba dancer Diana Prado performs during a carnival parade at central station in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on Feb. 2.

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    10 comments

    Diana, you are just plain drop dead gorgeous. Thank you for brighten my day.

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  • 8
    Feb
    2013
    1:03am, EST

    Opening waltz at Opera Ball in Vienna

    Herwig Prammer / Reuters

    Two hundred and eighty-eight dancers of the opening committee dance the opening waltz at the traditional Opera Ball in Vienna February 7, 2013. Some 5,000 visitors enjoy one of Austria's most glittering social events, paying 250 euros ($335) for entry tickets and up to 18,500 euros ($24,800) for compartments.

    Herwig Prammer / Reuters

     

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  • 1
    Feb
    2013
    1:18pm, EST

    Grand Central Terminal: New York City icon turns 100

    Adrees Latif / Reuters

    Morning commuters are silhouetted as they walk through the main concourse of the Grand Central Terminal, in New York on March 5, 2012.

    By A. Pawlowski, NBC News contributor

    Before airports started transporting – and frustrating – travelers on a massive scale, there was New York’s Grand Central Terminal.

    Friday marks 100 years since the first set of keys was handed to the terminal’s station master, with the first train leaving just after midnight on the following day. Shuttling millions of commuters since, the terminal – with its vast spaces and lovely architecture – has become a destination in itself.

    Through the hustle and bustle of Grand Central, a voice at its center helps guide passengers to their destinations. After 40 years with the MTA, Jake Kaloidas will retire just as the station marks its 100 years. Produced by John Makely, additional footage by Natalia Jimenez.

    The city is celebrating the big birthday with a public rededication ceremony, live performances and the opening of the “Grand by Design” exhibit.

    “I love, love, love Grand Central Terminal,” said Justin Ferate, a historian and longtime New York tour guide. “It’s truly one of the greatest buildings in this country if not the world.”

    Ferate often instructs visitors to pick their favorite airport and then picture going there twice a day, five days a week for decades. He then asks: How many people are feeling warm, fuzzy thoughts? Not many raise their hands, but it’s different with Grand Central, which regular commuters actually like, he said.

    Hal Morey / Hulton Archive via Getty Images

    1930s: Beams of sunlight stream through the windows at Grand Central Terminal, in New York City.

    “Grand Central is a major icon in the city,” added Anthony Robins, author of “Grand Central Terminal: 100 Years of a New York Landmark.”

    “(It) just has this breadth and scale and sense of grandeur that you can’t be in that part of town and not notice it.”

    NBC News asked Ferate and Robins to share some insider facts about the iconic building.

    Slideshow: Grand Central Terminal turns 100

    Michael Ochs Archives via Getty Images

    With hundreds of people moving through each day, Grand Central Terminal turns 100 on Feb. 2, 2013, and remains one of the most visited icons of New York City.

    Launch slideshow

    Don’t call it Grand Central Station: This is actually the third Grand Central on the site. The original was Grand Central Depot, completed in 1871, and then rebuilt as Grand Central Station in 1899-1900, Robins said. Grand Central Terminal was opened in 1913 and that is the correct way to refer to the landmark.

    Today, Grand Central Station is the name of the on-site post office, but not the famous building. “I always say, if you call it Grand Central Station, then everyone knows you’re a tourist,” Ferate said.

    The Main Concourse is laid out in “human ratios:” Each block of stone that makes up the floor is one walking step wide and one running step long, and each is a slightly different color, Ferate said. When you’re sprinting to catch the train it’s like running across a checker board based on your anatomy, so you don’t hit anybody, he added. In fact, Grand Central is designed to accommodate the human form, so everything is waist level and elbow level to ease the travel experience.

    Mario Tama / Getty Images

    People walk through Grand Central Terminal as others gather in the Apple store on the day before the famed Manhattan transit hub turns 100 years old on Jan. 31, in New York City.

    Try out the whispering gallery: If two people stand in the diagonal corners of the square foyer in front the Grand Central Oyster Bar and whisper, the sound carries across the arched ceiling. The effect is similar inside the eatery, so Ferate advised against going there for “illicit love.” “You can listen into the conversation taking place in another part of the restaurant,” he warned. “If you’re messing around, chances are pretty good you’re going to get caught.”

    A giant missile once stood in the Main Concourse: A 63-foot tall, 5-ton Redstone rocket was displayed at Grand Central in 1957 as Cold War tensions between the U.S. and the Soviet Union mounted. But it wasn’t unusual to see such a spectacle inside the landmark. “They had exhibits of all kinds at all times in Grand Central because it’s the great big public space that everybody knew,” Robins said.

    Brendan McDermid / Reuters

    The 59 stars shine as part of the backwards-painted zodiac set in gold leaf constellations span the ceiling of the main concourse of Grand Central Terminal in New York, on Jan. 25.

    Look for odd mementos in the ceiling: Grand Central Terminal is known for its “constellation ceiling” depicting a starry sky and signs of the zodiac. But sharp-eyed visitors may some unusual extras, such as the small hole where the stabilizing cable was dropped to secure the above-mentioned rocket, Ferate said.

    The ceiling also sports a dark spot -- a small portion of grime that was intentionally left untouched after a thorough cleaning in the 1990s, he added. The stain turned out to be caused by cigarette smoke.

    Go there for the shopping: “Grand Central has been made into a vast new destination for New Yorkers. So most of the people in the terminal at any given moment are probably not going to a train, they’re in to shop, to buy food, to go to a restaurant, to go to the Apple store,” Robins said.

    Mario Tama / Getty Images

    People are blurred in a long exposure as they walk through Grand Central Terminal on the day before the famed Manhattan transit hub turns 100 years old, on Jan. 31, in New York City.

    Related links:

    • Lost & Found at New York's Grand Central Terminal: Cell phones, scarves & dentures
    • 'Things from the heart': Workers at World Trade Center site scrawl graffiti of defiance, hope

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    29 comments

    Jackie Kennedy Onassis spearheaded an historic preservation initiative to renovate (as opposed to demolish) Grand Central in the 1970s. She did other great work preserving NYC landmarks. Bravo to her!

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  • 31
    Jan
    2013
    11:36pm, EST

    A backstage look at Flamenco fashion show in Spain

    Marcelo Del Pozo / Reuters

     

    Spanish model Marta Garcia, wearing a creation by Cristina Garcia, poses backstage during the International Flamenco Fashion Show (SIMOF) in the Andalusian capital of Seville January 31, 2013. The show will run until February 3.

    Marcelo Del Pozo / Reuters

    Models are seen backstage before the start of the International Flamenco Fashion Show.

    Marcelo Del Pozo / Reuters

    Spanish model Claudia Jimenez, wears a creation by Cristina Garcia and poses backstage.

    • More Photoblog from Spain

    1 comment

    Nice blog and nice collection, I Think We also learn from you and your blog because we also designing a blog..it related from fashion designers. Thanks & Regards Escort Madrid

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  • 25
    Jan
    2013
    12:21am, EST

    World's best paragliders compete in Colombia

    Luis Robayo / AFP - Getty Images

    Competitors fly above the mountains in Roldanillo, Valle del Cauca department, Colombia, during the Paragliding World Cup Superfinal, on January 24, 2013. The competition is taking place for the first time in Colombia and involves the 140 world's best pilots from 32 countries.

     

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    4 comments

    I have no idea how I was convinced to try paragliding while on a trip to Medellin a few years back but it was one of the most exciting experiences in my life, after the initial shock of floating through the air disappeared. To learn more about paragliding in Colombia: medellintraveler.com

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  • 23
    Jan
    2013
    1:00am, EST

    Captivating mural painting in Sao Paulo

    Nacho Doce / Reuters

    Brazilian graffiti artist Eduardo Kobra (C) puts the final touches to his piece of art in tribute to Brazilian architect Oscar Niemeyer, next to his assistants, at the financial center on Sao Paulo's Avenida Paulista January 22, 2013. Kobra created the 56-meter (61-yard) tall graffiti artwork as a tribute to Niemeyer, one of the 20th century's most influential modernist architects. Niemeyer died in December 2012, aged 104.

    Nacho Doce / Reuters

    Brazilian graffiti artist Eduardo Kobra puts the final touches.

    Nacho Doce / Reuters

     

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  • 20
    Jan
    2013
    3:37pm, EST

    Celebrating Martin Luther King Jr. in Washington

    John Makely / NBC News

    The Martin Luther King Jr. Monument stands within view of the Washington Monument on the mall in Washington, D.C.

    John Makely / NBC News

    Latanya Rogers, left, and Kenyae Reese, right, pose for a photo during their visit to the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial.

    By John Makely, NBC News

    On Sunday afternoon as President Obama was being officially sworn in to begin his second term in the White House, thousands of people visited the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial nearby on the Washington Mall. 

    John Makely / NBC News

    Bernita King, of Los Angeles, Calif.. takes a photograph during her visit to the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial.

    Kenyae Reese, who is from South Bend, Ind., but now lives in Washington, was able to describe the atmosphere as busloads of students and tour groups began to fill the space. "I think it speaks to the growth of the country and really of the world that we're standing here and we finally have a monument to recognize Dr. King. I think it's inspiring to our young people of all races. I don't think it's just an African-American thing.  I think its wonderful that we're able to have these celebrations as well, but I think it speaks to the character of our nation and all of us can celebrate and be a part of this. You look out and see people of different races celebrating, so we've come a long way."

    Related content
    Slideshow: Martin Luther King Jr.
    Photoblog: More MLK posts

     

    John Makely/ NBC News.com

    Early visitors to the Martin Luther King Jr. monument take pictures.

    65 comments

    Well, I lived through all the civil rights stuff, and I'm still trying to figure out, what he did, that was so great, considering the state of black america.

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  • 5
    Jan
    2013
    12:46am, EST

    Snowkiter catching air in Swiss Alps

    Dietmar Stiplovsek / EPA

    A snowkiter enjoys snow and sun at the Bernina pass, Switzerland on Friday, Jan. 3, 2013.

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  • 28
    Dec
    2012
    7:48pm, EST

    Full moon rises near the Empire State Building

    Gary Hershorn / Reuters

    A full moon rises behind the Empire State Building and the skyline of New York, as people watch from a park along the Hudson River in Hoboken, New Jersey, Friday December 28, 2012.  

    Check out more PhotoBlog posts of the moon


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  • 28
    Dec
    2012
    7:54am, EST

    The colorful faces of Kathmandu's Yomari Puni festival

    Narendra Shrestha / EPA

    A group of young Nepalese Newari girls wearing costumes representing various deities participate Jyapu Day procession in Kathmandu, Nepal, on Dec. 28. Thousands of the Kathmandu based majority Jyapu, which means ethnic farmers, celebrated farmers day all over the country. The Nepalese government has made the day a national holiday in recognition of the Jyapu.

    Niranjan Shrestha / AP

    A Newar community girl dressed as a deity watches as she participates in a parade marking Yomari Puni festival in Katmandu, Nepal, on Dec. 28. Yomari Puni is a festival observed annually by the Newari community on a full moon day where Yomari, a confection of rice flour, is prepared and eaten.

    Niranjan Shrestha / AP

    Newar community girls dressed as deities participate in a parade marking Yomari Puni festival in Katmandu, Nepal, on Dec. 28.

    See more photos from Nepal on PhotoBlog.

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