Find A Pops
You can find a POPS by using the interactive map, the photographs, or the address list.
in New York City
You can find a POPS by using the interactive map, the photographs, or the address list.
Have a pithy comment about a POPS? Please share it with everyone.
Is a POPS closed when it should be open? Are movable chairs missing? You are helping, not squealing, by revealing.
Let the City know through 311 and let us know by posting a comment in the Comment box at the bottom of the POPS profile.
Help rate POPS, with five stars for excellent, four for very good, three for good, two for fair, and one for poor. You can rate the POPS at its profile.
Be complimentary or critical, serious or whimsical, theoretical or practical, but do it in 500 words or less.
Go to the POPS you want to write about and submit your thoughts.
Propose a new design for a POPS in plan, sketch, perspective, section, or whatever. Maybe it will catch the eye of the owner. Go to the POPS profile that interests you and upload your ideas.
Get your best Berenice Abbott on and upload a photo or video at the POPS profile.
We are not programmers of POPS, but your idea may catch the ear or eye of the owner. Music, theatre, dance, visual arts, whatever…please submit your ideas.
With its fixed benches and row of tall trees near the sidewalk edge, this narrow, rectangular plaza on the south side of West 27th Street between Seventh...continued.
The profile for this POPS has not yet been written, but data is available. ...continued.
Set on the north side of East 72nd Street between the F.D.R. Drive and York Avenue, this public park appropriates many of the elements found at Paley Park,...continued.
Sited diagonally on a through-block parcel fronting East 53rd and 54th Streets between Sutton Place South and First Avenue, this residential tower generates...continued.
Located between West 41st and 42nd Streets and Eleventh and Twelfth Avenues, east of its host building, this public open space is under construction, thus...continued.
Four steps below the sidewalk, this rectangular plaza extends north from the northeast corner of East 33rd Street and Second Avenue. Fixed concrete seating...continued.
Up four steps from the sidewalk on the south side of East 34th Street between Third and Lexington Avenues, this popular rectangular residential plaza playfully...continued.
The plaza is an extension to the sidewalk on the east side of Broad Street, next to the arcade, as well as patches along the south side of Water Street,...continued.
Located between Madison and Fifth Avenues on both East 48th and 49th Streets, the south-facing and north-facing spaces of this urban plaza provide something...continued.
Privately owned public space and office skyscrapers are equally anomalous in Queens. Indeed, the landscaped public open space and pedestrian circulation...continued.
On October 18 and 19 at Jazz at Lincoln Center's Frederick P. Rose Hall, more than 1,100 innovative city shapers and thought leaders gathered as the Municipal Art Society presented the third annual MAS Summit for New York City. This forum of ideas featured more than 90 speakers over the two days and highlighted trailblazing initiatives in New York and other cities across the globe. read more
COMMENT
ON A POPS