author: Peter : Staten Island, NY (19 months ago)
author: Peter : Staten Island, NY (19 months ago)
author: JoeyD : San Jose, CA (19 months ago)
author: JoeyD : San Jose, CA (19 months ago)
author: adam : Staten Island, NY (19 months ago)
author: CartLegger : Staten Island, NY (19 months ago)
author: CartLegger : Staten Island, NY (19 months ago)
author: JoeyD : San Jose, CA (19 months ago)
author: JoeyD : San Jose, CA (19 months ago)
author: JoeyD : San Jose, CA (19 months ago)
author: JoeyD : San Jose, CA (19 months ago)
author: JoeyD : San Jose, CA (19 months ago)
author: JoeyD : Berkeley, CA (19 months ago)
author: Peter : Staten Island, NY (19 months ago)
author: David : Taipei, Taiwan (19 months ago)
author: Ariel : Tasmania, AU (19 months ago)
author: ntatap : Bronx, NY (19 months ago)
author: joey : Oakland, CA (19 months ago)
author: Ariel : Tasmania, AU (19 months ago)
author: Peter : New York, NY (19 months ago)
author: the nite fox : Cleveland, OH (19 months ago)
author: groovehouse : Houston, TX (19 months ago)
author: Jorge : Hong Kong, China (19 months ago)
author: Peter : Queens, NY (19 months ago)
author: Matthew : Brooklyn, NY (20 months ago)
author: Peter : Brooklyn, NY (20 months ago)
author: Dylan K : Brisbane, AU (20 months ago)
author: Peter : New York, NY (20 months ago)
author: Mime : Townsville, AU (20 months ago)
author: Peter : Queens, NY (20 months ago)
| | author: Peter : Staten Island, NY (19 months ago)

Built in 1917, this now-abandoned factory once housed the chicle-processing operations for the
Wm. Wrigley Jr. Company, aka Wrigley's Gum
You can see the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge from inside
It even features a nice view of Manhattan in the middle-distance, and Brooklyn to the right,
just across the Verrazano Narrows
Rosebank, Staten Island, New York City...
author: Peter : Staten Island, NY (19 months ago)

Workboats docked in the Verrazano Narrows, which separate Staten Island to the west and Brooklyn to the east...
author: JoeyD : San Jose, CA (19 months ago)

After more than 22 years of bureaucratic inaction, efforts to clean up a former Air Force radar station on a scenic mountaintop above Silicon Valley and open its summit to hikers, bicyclists and picnickers may be finally gathering momentum, locally and in Washington, D.C.
"It feels like all the pieces are coming together and that it's going to happen this time," said Rep. Mike Honda, D-Campbell. "Why should only rich people have a view? It should be available to everybody."
At issue is the former Almaden Air Force Station, which operated from 1957 to 1980 on the top of Mount Umunhum. Named...
author: JoeyD : San Jose, CA (19 months ago)

author: adam : Staten Island, NY (19 months ago)
 explored a boat yard
went through some openings.. some bigger than others
surveyed the landscape
|