Window-Dressing the West Village and MePa for #Irene: A Case Study

If you Google "Should I tape my windows for a hurricane?," the internet will tell you "No." Here's FEMA, for example:  "Tape does not prevent windows from breaking." Still, New Yorkers have seen everyone else do it in countless Gulf hurricanes, so we weren't going to pass up our rare opportunity.  

Diane von Furstenburg chose a simple but classic blue X for every window in her buidling at Washington & 14th. 

Just down the block, the folks at the Apple store apparently Googled. No tape, just tarps over the doors and sandbags at the base.  

Apple's bags are a handsome gray-green, hand-filled and -tied.

Across the street, L'Occitane opted for a tape-and-sandbag combo.  

But their bags are off-the-rack, and, as of 3 pm Saturday, already breaking open. 

Just up the street, Pop Burger went for a more expressive approach.

As did Sea Thai on Washington.

And the nearby Limo Land.

And this store. Maybe masking tape was the wrong choice. 

A more tradtional look at Wallse.  

Entwine combined tape, tarp and sand bags. 

Next door, Tortilla Flats had nothing on its windows except a raspberry for Mayor Bloomberg.

Automatic Slims was one of the rare spots in the nabe that went full plyboard. 

A nearby townhouse deployed sandbags. 

But the sandbag champ is a couple of blocks away -- a wall seven bags deep, all around the newly rebuilt building at the corner of Washington and Horatio. This is where photogrpaher Albert Watson used to live.  

On Greewich, El Faro's solution had a more DIY feel: flattenned cardboard boxes and duct tape. 

The same solution in the building next door.  

At midafternoon, Slice on Hudson was just getting around to its big tape job.

Next door, the staff at the Monocole Shop was issued explicit instructions from chief Monocler Tyler Brulee: "No Xs! Just tape the edges!" Well done, gents.  

21 responses
very cute :)
I thought the tape was to make sure the broken glass didn't turn into projectiles & stab you/ get into all your stuff.
Taping the windows does no good but it does create a horrendous mess after the storm.
Please tell me the blue tape isn't painter's tape.
The more I see of New Yorkers' sense of humour, the more I think I should emigrate and come and live with you all. :-)
This is indeed an interesting case study!

I've never thought people would tape their windows in such a cute manner in preps for hurricane. Ain't sure if these measures are effective but personally like the Apple's handsome bags!

Ataleofa: The blue tape sure looked like painter's tape to me. Meant to add that. The mind boggles.
Funny! :)
Here's hoping nobody slits their hands open razoring all of the tape gunk off afterwards. Mess indeed.
A fun post - love New Yorkers!
Can't they find any non-plastic sandbags....don't they know what it does to the environment? I am appalled....brown paper bags would...wait..they would disintegrate...nevermind...
If Steve Jobs was still running Apple, their sandbags would have been made from the same black-grey linen they use for all their backgrounds now.
ooh iBag - very chic Apple!
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If you Google "Should I tape my windows for a hurricane?," the internet will tell you "No." Here's FEMA, for example: "Tape does levitra not prevent windows from breaking." Still, New Yorkers have seen everyone else do it in countless Gulf hurricanes, so we weren't going to pass up our rare opportunity.
It won't work in reality, that's exactly what I consider.
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