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A dinosaur-themed bodega has popped up at this NYC subway station—here's why
A dinosaur-themed bodega has popped up at this NYC subway station—here's why

Time Out

time15-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Time Out

A dinosaur-themed bodega has popped up at this NYC subway station—here's why

As New Yorkers know, if you see something strange in a subway station, odds are good that it's best to keep walking. But some stations are getting weird on purpose thanks to an MTA initiative aimed at making our subway stops seem a little less like something found in a dystopian nightmare. The Grand Army Plaza station (serving the 2 and 3 trains) is getting attention for its new bodega, Rex's Dino Store, staffed entirely by papier mache dinosaurs and offering up such delights as Clawmond Joys, packs of Snarlboros (hopefully less than the $20 a pack real Marlboros sell for these days), and Dinopolitan Magazine, plus ads seeking renters for a '$4,500 a moon' cave. And don't worry: Even in prehistoric times, 'Steg Yun' is still plastering their ads everywhere they can. The project and its meticulous attention to details (and puns) come courtesy of artists Akiva Leffert and Sarah Cassidy as part of the MTA's Vacant Unit Activation Program. Yes, the MTA is acknowledging that its myriad empty storefronts throughout the system might not be the best mood booster for commuters, and they're actively seeking artists to transform the blank holes into something cool and 'whimsical.' 'We are looking to activate vacant spaces to improve the station atmosphere,' MTA Construction & Development President Jamie Torres-Springer said in a statement. 'This initiative seeks partners who can offer engaging and creative activations like art installations or non-profit programming to provide a socially beneficial use and bring more life to the station's environment.' Rex's Dino Store remains on view through December 2025, but it's not the only art installation entertaining subway riders. At Jay St-Metro Tech, a former newsstand displays City Critters and New York, We Love You!, murals from artists with YAI, a nonprofit that works with people with autism, Down syndrome, and other disabilities. And the Euclid Av stop hosts Memories Matter, in which historical photographs of the neighborhood and blown-up front pages from period newspapers are plastered over shuttered kiosks. Turns out, the next time you see something in a subway station, it might be worth stopping and looking a little more closely. If nothing else, you can always tell your boss you were late because you stopped to admire some art.

Dino Store the latest in MTA's underground art movement
Dino Store the latest in MTA's underground art movement

New York Post

time06-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • New York Post

Dino Store the latest in MTA's underground art movement

NYC's art scene is going back underground — literally. As the Big Apple's subterranean newsstands, shoe shine parlors, barber shops and other vintage conveniences roll down their gates for the last time, the MTA has been experimenting with a creative way to fill the voids — with eye-catching installations Dubbed the Vacant Unit Activation program, which the agency said is aimed at making stations 'more welcoming and whimsical spaces for riders,' a number of artists are being given a platform to show the world their stuff. 6 Akiva Leffert is the co-founder of Rex's Dino Store — a funny one-stop for scaly straphangers that recently popped up inside Brooklyn's Grand Army Plaza subway station. Olga Ginzburg for NY Post Mira Atherton, senior manager of MTA construction development, told The Post that the spaces had been determined as unfit for rental for a variety of reasons. 'These are often units … that are in old stations, typically ones that have been there for over a hundred years. They are funky shapes. They're small, they have often a lot of utility issues,' she said. 'They don't have water or a waste line. They might be in stations that are not as well-trafficked.' By giving drab corners a Gotham-style glow-up, Atherton said the agency aims not only to inspire riders, but also provide 'affordable space for artists and nonprofits who often have trouble finding space.' Since the 2023 inception of the project, run by the MTA Real Estate initiative, there have been twelve total activations — with eight running currently. As a service to busy commuters, we've done the legwork and wrangled five stops to keep an eye out for. The land before Time magazine 6 Rex is the proprietor of the Dino Store — where prehistoric puns are served up, free of charge. Olga Ginzburg for NY Post Real newsstands may be going the way of the triceratops, but any scaly straphangers waiting for the 2/3 at Brooklyn's Grand Army Plaza station will find all their needs catered for at Rex's Dino Store. The newly-opened spot, overseen by the eponymous 7-foot-tall T-Rex proprietor, offers up 50 punny primeval products — from copies of the Maul Street Journal and the Jurassic Park Slope Courier to Snarlboros and Three Tusketeers. There's even an appearance by the prehistoric doppelganger to New York's favorite tabloid — The Pangaea Post. (On the cover — a tyrannosaur in handcuffs, with the headline: SMALL ARMS DEALER.) 'It's a bodega for dinosaurs,' co-founder Akiva Leffert explained to The Post of the Rex-treme makeover — which he collaborated on with fellow creative and former standup comedian Sarah Cassidy. 6 Some of the Triassic tabloids on offer at the Dino Store, including Post doppelganger The Pangaea Post. Olga Ginzburg for NY Post 'We were riffing on this idea of just old newsstand, really old newsstand. Really, really old new stand,' Leffert said. 'And the jokes just kind of started writing themselves.' The shop, which sits behind protective glass to keep it safe from modern-day marauders, reportedly took over a year to complete, including four months for Rex himself — he's made of chicken wire covered in paper maché — with ping-pong balls for the eyes. In accordance with code, this was then fire-proofed by certified professionals — to prevent any mass-extinction events. How to train your subway performer 6 The Sound Booth at the 81st Street-Natural History Museum stop books local artists. Megan Armas / MTA Between throngs of commuters, trains, and soaring assaults, the subway platform can seem like a dangerous place for performers. As a service to buskers, non-profit Art on the Ave NYC has established the Sound Booth, a music box on the 81st Street-Natural History Museum stop for local musicians to serenade passersby. 'It's great because it gives them a relatively safe place to perform in the sense that they're right close to the ticket office and right by the turnstiles,' Barbara Anderson, Executive Director of Art on the Ave NYC, told The Post. 'And they can just go in there.' Along with providing three walls, the Sound Booth is outfitted with speakers, amps and more so performers 'don't have to bring all of their equipment,' per Anderson. There's even a musically-inspired mural featuring Billie Holiday, the Beatles, a DJ and some tambourines. Originally opened in June 2024, the installation was originally supposed to run for six months but they kept it going because it was such a hit, according to the Art on the Ave boss. To date, the Sound Booth — which is open four days a week for three hours slots — has attracted over 50 artists, including the famed 'Saw Lady' Natalia Paruz; The Meetles (a Beatles cover band), an acapella group from Fordham University; a flute trio, DJs and the Motown singers who cruise the subways most weekends. Starting June 10, the installment will be home to a Sing For Hope Piano — artist-designed ivory boxes that are sprinkled around the city — marking the first time the non-profit has had a piano in the subway system. Calm in the storm 6 Kathleen Marie Ryan's 'Nympheas Rouge: Reflections of Spring' installation, located on the 53rd Street and Fifth Avenue E train downtown subway platform. Tamara Beckwith Finding solitude during a hectic commute can seem impossible at times. Fortunately, patrons of the proletariat chariot can grab a moment of quiet reflection with the serene 'Nympheas Rouge: Reflections of Spring' installation located on the 53rd Street and Fifth Avenue E train downtown subway platform. With the help of the MTA and ChaShaMa, a non-profit that transforms derelict real estate into art spaces, artist Kathleen Marie Ryan converted this defunct newsstand into a 24-square-foot immersive display with her painting of waterlilies on three walls and a mirrored floor serving as a reflecting pool. Coincidentally, the tranquil triptych, which took over a year to complete, is located just a block away from Monet's water lilies at the Museum of Modern Art. 'After studying how people interact with art in museums, I wanted this microenvironment to give passersby a moment of calm and beauty in one of the most stressful parts of the city,' said Ryan. 'A tourist from Sacramento said it felt 'like a moment of calm in a storm.'' In 2019, international researchers found that subterranean art installations can even help the depression and tension caused by subway spaces. Thanks for the memories 6 One of the highlights is a headline from an East New Yorker describing when Edolphus 'Ed' Towns Jr. made history as the first African American deputy borough president in 1976. Gregg Richards / BPL East New Yorkers are bringing color to Brooklyn commuters' day with a nostalgic wall montage featuring maps, historic photos and other memorabilia that pays tribute to the legendary neighborhood's past. The installation, called Memories Matter, was a community collaboration between local residents of all ages, the East New York Community Land Trust and the Center for Brooklyn History at the Brooklyn Public Library. Along with map collages and floral displays, the display also features historical photographs of the neighborhood, as well as images from community newspapers and excerpts from interviews with local residents. It's a hot new track The subway platform soundtrack is no longer screeching subway tracks and raving EDPs. Located at the Chambers Street metro station, Chamber Hum was created to restore the auditory balance by playing various experimental and ambient compositions — each of which run for one month — on a multi-channel sound system. This month's buzzy track is reportedly inspired by a mysterious humming noise in Taos, New Mexico that's reportedly only able to be heard by 2% of the town's population. In fact, the sound has even been blamed for insomnia dizziness and other symptoms, but here the version serves to create ear-quilibrium amid the metro carriage cacophony. The installation is 'active 23 hours each day, with a short break between the hours of 4AM and 5AM,' organizer WPZSCH writes on the site.

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