This month in NYC you will find new street art murals, sculptural installations, video art, groundbreaking and newsworthy exhibitions in the city's major museums and more.
Today, the Cortlandt Street subway station at World Trade Center re-opened to riders for the first time since it was severely damaged during 9/11.
It's been 25 years since the 1993 World Trade Center Bombing, when a rental van carrying a 1,200-pound bomb detonated below the World Trade Center.
February brings romance to Times Square. The month will kick-off a year-long show, and features sculptures of candy twists and physical manifestations of love.
Passengers arriving to the WTC via subway walk through the last remnants of the original World Trade Center subway concourse from the 1970s.
The New Jersey Transit launched an ad campaign featuring renderings of NYC's original Penn Station today, posing the question “Wouldn’t you rather arrive here?”
Today, the World Trade Center Greenmarket makes a triumphant downtown return with its first market since the attacks of 9/11 now located at the Oculus Plaza.
The New York Wheel on Staten Island will be the world's tallest. The first components of the ferris wheel, the legs, were unloaded on the Brooklyn waterfront.
At Brookfield Place, Canadian design studio, Daily tous les jour, has a new art installation: colorful swings that play sounds of musical instruments when used.
The New York Times sent photographer and climber Jimmy Chinn to the top of 1 World Trade Center's spire for the virtual reality video, Man on Spire.