Coney Island - Abandoned Playland
January 31, 2011 -
There are few places in New York City as depressing and inspirational as Coney Island in the off season. Freezing winds whip up from the Atlantic Ocean, driving snow across the empty beaches and boardwalk. A handful of pedestrians brave the elements, hunkered down into fur parkas in a scene more reminiscent of a frozen Siberian outpost. Nearly every business in Coney Island's amusement district closes for the winter season, shutters pulled down over arcades, bars and seafood shacks. Even the homeless camps under the boardwalk are vacated.
This year, Coney Island's off season has been particularly harsh. Many well-known businesses are not expected to reopen in the summer. Cha Cha's and Ruby's have served their last drinks and have, in turn, been served with eviction papers. Demolition crews are busy tearing down landmarks like the Bank of Coney Island. And in December 2010, Shoot The Freak was destroyed in a surprise attack by its landlord. “They came like thieves in the night,” the booth's owner told The Brooklyn Paper. “Those little sneaks emptied out the place and there is nothing left, except for the Shoot the Freak sign.” The cyclical nature of destruction and rebirth in Coney Island is currently in a valley of annihilation, as the city moves towards a sanitized version of the boardwalk.
Perhaps the best remaining symbol of how Coney Island's colorful past is being left behind is the Playland Arcade. Built in 1935, it "evolved from a Silver's Penny Arcade and remained open year-round until 1981," according to Forgotten New York. The arcade once faced the legendary Thunderbolt roller coaster, which was famed for the 1895 hotel located beneath its tracks. The Thunderbolt and the Kensington Hotel were torn down in November 2000, during another off season "surprise attack," according to The Journal of New York Folklore, demolished by the city to make way for "waterfront development plans for a new, more profitable Coney Island."
Today, the Playland Arcade faces a broad empty field and has been abandoned for many years. Inside the arcade, an army of raccoons and cats has taken over. If not for the freezing winter weather, the stench of their urine would be overwhelming. Hundreds of empty cat food containers litter the floor. Large sections of ceiling have come down, allowing rain and snow to rot the interior. Collapsing walls are propped up by police barricades. Trees grow in the squalor.
Lining the walls of this forlorn structure is an impressive artifact from Coney Island's history, in the form of dozens of hand painted murals. Though badly deteriorated, there are many colorful scenes remaining. Presented almost as panels in a comic book, these are portraits of a different Coney Island era, long past. Strip poker, naked hunting, shotgun weddings, Sasquatch, moonshine, skeeball, mermaids and cartoonish gun violence. This is Coney Island's lost soul, a forgotten and crumbling old arcade full of cat piss, ruinous decay and dark carnival whimsy.
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For other photo essays from Coney Island's off-season, visit The Freak's Domain (2008) and Under The Boardwalk (2009).
Nathan Kensinger
Beautiful Work!
ReplyDeleteWow! i absolutely love this. I always try to sneak a peek inside whenever I pass it. Thank you for giving an in-depth tour of the place! Can't believe all of the cans of cat food in there.
ReplyDeleteHaunting, beautiful!
ReplyDeleteAs always, just amazing photos! The two that struck me most -- "cat food" for the weirdness & "carnival prize" for the lump-in-the-throat sadness
ReplyDeleteOn behalf of "AbandonedPlaces" on Live Journal, well done. In a reply to the NYT story on the site and your photos, I've posted this:
ReplyDeletehttp://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/01/31/in-the-ruins-of-playland-artifacts-of-better-days/comment-page-1/#comment-863393
Mysterious and eerie. I have just discovered your site, and your gorgeous photos. Strange to see the kitschy, peeling, bizarrely cheerful murals and to imagine the cat and raccoon army now occupying the space. Thanks for your work.
ReplyDeleteInteresting works.
ReplyDeleteHow in the world did you gain acess inside to get suh incredible photographs? I visit Coney several times each winter to enjoy its off-season beauty, and I have always been tempted to limb the fence for a closer look at the old Playland buildings before they completely colapse or are torn down for good... Any insight would be most appreciated :) - Aimee nycid524@yahoo.com
ReplyDeleteI belive it used to be a nice place to visit some time ago. I wish it would be rebuilt in future. It keeps its history and it has the right to be. imho
ReplyDeleteLooks pretty scare, but I think earlier Coney Island was a pretty popular spot and looked nice according to the remains from it. It's a pity that the goverment doesn't take any measures to restore it or reopen something new!
ReplyDeleteThis place was a very nice arcade back in the day. I used to go there all the time as a kid growing up in Coney Island. I would enter through the front entrance on Neptune Ave and exit on the other side which was on the bowery right in front of the Thunderbolt roller coaster. I used to love to play skee-ball and cash my tickets in for a plastic whistle etc. This place was jam packed during the summer. I also remember it being pretty warm as there was no air conditioning just big fans which seem to still be hanging on the ceiling [See Above Picture] to this day. Man, I reall miss Playland.
ReplyDeleteGreat pictures. Thanks for posting them.
ReplyDeleteWhat great shots. Thanks
ReplyDeleteLove your photos. Thanks for saving them on 'film' Len M
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