Alley Pond Park is the second-largest public park in Queens, New York.
Among the trails that snake through the hilly forest of Alley Pond Park is a crumbling asphalt bike lane built in the 1930's.
Not far to the east, it crosses over the Cross Island Parkway at Alley Pond Park.
He's over by Alley Pond Park with a kite.
The tree, located just north of I-495 in Alley Pond Park, is visible from the highway's westbound lanes.
The section of the highway in the vicinity of Alley Pond Park was completed by 1958.
The man pressed a knife to her throat and forced her into nearby Alley Pond Park.
A $700,000 restoration of six acres of marshland at Alley Pond Park in Queens is nearly complete.
A series of calls to the Parks Department's press office revealed there was no recorded data for any "great tree" in Alley Pond Park.
Tulip trees, some three centuries old and 100 feet high, still stand in Alley Pond Park.
Alley Pond Park is the second-largest public park in Queens, New York.
Among the trails that snake through the hilly forest of Alley Pond Park is a crumbling asphalt bike lane built in the 1930's.
Not far to the east, it crosses over the Cross Island Parkway at Alley Pond Park.
He's over by Alley Pond Park with a kite.
The tree, located just north of I-495 in Alley Pond Park, is visible from the highway's westbound lanes.
The section of the highway in the vicinity of Alley Pond Park was completed by 1958.
The man pressed a knife to her throat and forced her into nearby Alley Pond Park.
A $700,000 restoration of six acres of marshland at Alley Pond Park in Queens is nearly complete.
A series of calls to the Parks Department's press office revealed there was no recorded data for any "great tree" in Alley Pond Park.
Tulip trees, some three centuries old and 100 feet high, still stand in Alley Pond Park.