Monday, May 24, 2010

Why do some New York City Taxis now have flowers painted on their roofs?

I stayed at the Westin Times Square on the 33rd floor and while looking out the window down onto the street I noticed several yellow cabs had these 60's era flower designs painted on top of their roofs and some on the front bumper. What does this mean?

Why do some New York City Taxis now have flowers painted on their roofs?
It’s an idea that seems more like Woodstock, 1969, than New York City, 2007, but it has the Bloomberg administration’s blessing and the city is going ahead with it.


Starting today and extending through December, hand-painted, adhesive, weatherproof images of giant decorative flowers will be applied to the hoods, trunks or roofs of New York City’s yellow taxicabs. Ninety percent of the flowers were painted by children from the city’s public schools and hospitals; a fraction were painted by children in New Jersey, Philadelphia, Atlanta, Cleveland and Los Angeles.


The flowers “will soon transform the ubiquitous yellow icon into a mobile artistic canvas,” according to a news release from Portraits of Hope, the nonprofit program that is organizing the effort.


The vast public art project, known as “Garden in Transit,” originated with two brothers, Ed and Bernie Massey, who founded Portraits of Hope in 1995. The project was intended to provide creative therapy for seriously ill and disabled children, but has expanded to include children and adults participating through schools, after-school programs, hospitals and nonprofit groups. Portraits of Hope has decorated blimps, buildings, tugboats, airplanes and even Nascar racers; the taxicabs are the group’s latest effort.


Ed Massey conceived of the idea in spring 2000, and after preliminary meetings with the city’s Taxi and Limousine Commission, Bernie Massey, his older brother, led a team in developing educational and civic engagement elements for the project. The taxi commission unanimously agreed to support the project in July 2006, and Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg announced the event at a news conference.


“By unleashing the creative power and civic pride of New Yorkers, our city has come together for one of the biggest volunteer efforts we have ever seen,” the mayor said.


Bernie Massey, 46, said the flowers were chosen for the project because children everywhere — including the hospital wards the brothers visited — draw them. “It’s the one universal symbol of hope, beauty, life, joy, inspiration,” he said.


(The Massey brothers grew up in Los Angeles. When Bernie was asked whether he and Ed, 42, enjoyed flowers as children, he said, “We liked flowers, but they were no more special than anything else.”)


The cab owners and drivers do not have to pay for the flower patterns, and participation is voluntary. The vinyl flowers do not damage the cabs and are easily removed. The organizers hope to get a majority of the city’s 13,000 yellow cabs to participate. At a news conference today at Union Square, the organizers unveiled six cabs with the decals. Each cab can accommodate two or three panels; each panel has one to five flowers on it. About 27,600 panels have been painted, enough for each cab to have two.


“The kids have done their part,” Bernie Massey said. “Now it’s up to the taxicab industry. The mayor’s office and the T.L.C. are trying to rally the support of the industry.”


Garden in Transit is a privately financed effort that has included about $1.5 million in cash donations so far. Helen and Peter Bing, a California-based couple, and Empire Blue Cross Blue Shield have been among the donors to the project. Vornado Realty Trust provided about 20,000 square feet of studio space, while MACtac, a manufacturer of adhesive products, gave deep discounts on the flower decals.
Reply:Soot pollution kills 40,000e Americans each year so I wonder how long this flower power disguise will last for these cabs. Soon or later someone will complain and take notice and force the TLC to comply with human standards Report It



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