For more than a decade, the New York Metropolitan Transportation Authority has treated the Atlantic as its very own graveyard, tossing thousands of old subway cars off a barge to rust away on the ocean floor. An environmental crime? Hardly. The program creates habitats for marine life from Georgia to Jersey and gives New York’s aging subway cars a vibrant (and free!) retirement home.
Now, New York photographer Stephen Mallon has captured the MTA’s artificial reef program in a gobstopping collection of stills that look like what you’d get if you combined an Ed Burtynsky series with the freeze frames of The Matrix and the train porn of The Taking of Pelham One Two Three (without the agro hostage situation). We’ve got lots of details on the program and a selection of Mallon’s photographs above.
Check out the full slideshow over at Co. Design.
These are great, and really glad they’re online. Saw them with Brian & Caitlin (they’re like huge 4 foot by 4 foot prints) at a gallery that also had a show with a woman’s menstrual blood paintings. Oh, New York, never afraid to be a cliche.
These are incredible. Someone’s job is to occasionally sink subway cars into the ocean?
(Source: fastcompany)
1 year ago