A truck driver spent 20 years making a scale model of every building in NYC (smithsonianmag.com)

by 1659447091 70 comments 407 points
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[−] rmunn 38d ago
Joe Macken (the truck driver who built the model) and Ferdinand Cheval (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferdinand_Cheval) were never alive at the same time. But if they had ever met, they would have found each other to be kindred spirits.
[−] BretonForearm 34d ago
You may find Jenő Bory's castle interesting too: https://bory-var.hu/en
[−] c7b 38d ago
Awe-inspring. But one thing I don't get: he says he wants every building to be included, but the buildings in NYC are anything but permanent. Did he pick a particular timestamp for everything, or is it a mosaic of different epochs? Keeping the model up to date would be even more insane.
[−] 1659447091 38d ago

> he wants every building to be included, but the buildings in NYC are anything but permanent

I think he took creative liberties there. The Twin Towers and One World Trade Center are included; he started the project in ~2004

[−] keeganpoppen 38d ago
i absolutely love the sentiment from this closing sentence:

> “One of the reasons Joe is so insistent that every single building is here is because he would never want someone to come and see it and not be able to find where they live and see their story,” Sherman tells Artnet.

[−] bigwheels 38d ago
Previous related discussion:

Trucker built a scale model of NYC over 21 years https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45261877 - 18 comments, 6 months ago

[−] rkuska 38d ago
There is a miniature of Prague from around 1830 by Antonín Langweil. He dedicated his all free time to finish it in a hope of making money for his daughters. Langweil never found a benefactor for his work and he died poor. Pretty tragic story.

https://www.muzeumprahy.cz/en/visit-langweils-model-of-pragu...

[−] mcjiggerlog 38d ago
There's one of Madrid that also dates to 1830 that is insanely impressive, too:

https://www.madrid.es/UnidadesDescentralizadas/UDCMedios/not...

[−] AgentMatt 38d ago
His last name sounds very close to the German word for boredom (Langeweile), that's kind of funny...
[−] omnimus 38d ago
Unfortunately the museum itself is pretty lame. I don't recommend.
[−] sidpatil 37d ago
Why?
[−] layman51 38d ago
This is kind of timely for me because very recently I had heard of the film "Synecdoche, New York", but in this film, the scale model is more life-size.
[−] wincy 38d ago
A little off topic, but any time I see that word, it reminds me of the first time I read the word “synechdoche”, I wanted to know how to pronounce it and watched a very helpful YouTube video [0] three times before realizing someone had pulled a very funny prank from an earlier, less serious time on YouTube. I laughed and laughed.

[0] https://youtu.be/v-n1vGeVIXo

[−] ModernMech 37d ago
man that's a blast from the past, can't believe that's 14 years old :\
[−] cortesoft 38d ago
I was wondering if the scale model would have a smaller scale model at the location of the original model...
[−] deltarholamda 37d ago
Somewhat related, in 1943 German POWs built a scale model of the Mississippi River basin to use for modeling of flood control methods. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mississippi_River_Basin_Model) It's not in great shape now, but it's still walkable. Efforts are periodically made to rehab it.

Models are such a great tool, artistically, culturally, and scientifically. Joe's NYC model really helps put the scale of the city into perspective.

[−] dredmorbius 37d ago
Miniatures are fascinating.

There's also the San Francisco Bay Model, located in Sausalito, CA:

<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U.S._Army_Corps_of_Engineers_B...>

There's a model of Biblical Jerusalem at Temple Square in Salt Lake City, though I've no idea of its actual accuracy. This is located in the North Visitor's Centre: <https://www.myutahparks.com/things-to-do/attractions/temple-...>.

There's another such model at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem itself: <https://www.imj.org.il/en/wings/shrine-book/model-jerusalem-...>, and several others elsewhere in the world.

There are several models of ancient Rome, including appropriately one in Rome itself, the Plastico: <https://mymodernmet.com/scale-model-ancient-rome/>.

The Thorne Miniature Rooms at the Art Institute of Chicago are another delightful experience: <https://www.artic.edu/highlights/12/thorne-miniature-rooms>.

[−] OJFord 37d ago
'Truck driver' here serving only to put him down, because the feat wouldn't be expected of such a person?

Seems to me like papers' infamous (at least in the UK) references to victims' or alleged perpatrators' house prices, to instruct our sympathy, when it's not otherwise at all relevant.

[−] hdgvhicv 37d ago
“Normal person with normal job”

This isn’t someone working as a full time artist, this isn’t someone living off a trust fund, this isn’t someone selling their creating for millions for the money laundering. This is just a “man in his shed” with a blue collar job doing something awesome.

It says “anyone can doing something awesome”, you don’t need a fancy upbringing or million dollar backing.

[−] nopakos 37d ago
Artist who spent 20 years making a scale model of every building in NYC, makes a living as a truck driver.
[−] pohl 37d ago
Why to "put him down"? You seem to be making a tacit assumption that the work driving a truck is something one should look down upon.
[−] OJFord 37d ago
Is it lifting him up? It's certainly irrelevant, is my point. My assumption then is that it's because it's supposed to be surprising. 'Hobbyist spends 20y on their hobby' isn't that surprising, even if the hobby is interesting; instead of letting the story stand on that interest, they're attempting to add 'shock and awe'.
[−] mikkupikku 37d ago
Putting him down is your judgement revealing your own biases. Personally, I saw it as a put up. He's not some privileged prick, he's a normal guy!
[−] xyzal 37d ago
'Artist' would be more fitting.
[−] PhilippGille 38d ago
If you are interested in scale models of New York, there's a 1:1 scale model in Minecraft: https://youtu.be/ZouSJWXFBPk
[−] tejohnso 38d ago
Looking at the level of detail, and the thoroughness, I wouldn't have expected it to even be possible to complete it in 20 years. How much time does this guy spend driving truck? Amazing accomplishment and display of dedication and creativity.
[−] hermitcrab 38d ago
Brilliant. Stay weird, humans.
[−] carabiner 38d ago
This is what humans should be doing with their lives, and not spending 8 hours/day staring at screens. I'm so serious.
[−] lkm0 38d ago
A swiss architect did the same in the mid 19th century with Geneva, specifically to preserve an image of the city right before the entirety of the city walls were to be razed

pics: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Relief_Magnin

[−] mckn1ght 38d ago
Any way to know how many buildings were demolished and a newer one built in its place over that 20 year period? Wonder what he used for a reference. Is the model representative of a single moment in time, or is there some clock drift?
[−] llmslave 38d ago
We need people like this around