- Eventos y festivales
- En toda la ciudad
Un vistazo a la maratón más grande de NYC
El 3 de noviembre de 2024, más de 55 000 corredores salieron a la calle para la maratón TCS New York City, convirtiéndola en la maratón más grande de la historia. Unos 2 millones de espectadores bordearon las calles, convirtiendo las aceras en fiestas improvisadas en bloque a lo largo de zonas de vigilancia populares como First Avenue en Upper Manhattan y gran parte de Greenpoint, Brooklyn.
La maratón, que se celebró por primera vez en 1970 con solo 127 participantes corriendo circuitos en Central Park, ha crecido para dar la bienvenida a corredores de élite, celebridades y miles de otros. Obtienen una ventaja especial en los cinco boroughs, desde el puente Verrazzano-Narrows hasta el último puente maldito (Madison Avenue) antes de cruzar la línea de meta en Central Park hasta el estruendoso brindis.
Pero la experiencia es mucho más que la carrera. Marathon Sunday es una celebración en toda la ciudad con bandas en vivo, carteles caseros y espectadores que entregan de todo, desde rodajas de naranja hasta pañuelos de papel. Echa un vistazo a los momentos inolvidables del día de la carrera del año pasado en nuestra galería a continuación.

Lafayette Avenue, Fort Greene, Brooklyn
Members of the Define New York Run Club, based in Fort Greene, cheer for runners on Lafayette Avenue. “We make sure to cheer for all 50,000 runners, not just the many members of the club who pass by!”

Greenpoint, Brooklyn
Marathoners run past St. Anthony of Padua Catholic Church.

Lafayette Avenue, Fort Greene, Brooklyn
A music teacher at Bishop Loughlin Memorial High School Band plays the trumpet on the sidelines.

Greenpoint, Brooklyn
Spectators use noisemakers to cheer on the runners.

Fourth Avenue, Brooklyn
New Yorkers and visitors root on strangers while waiting for their loved ones to pass.

Manhattan Avenue, Greenpoint, Brooklyn
“I always dance. It is free magical energy. Just like this marathon.”

Lafayette Avenue, Fort Greene, Brooklyn
Friends from Harvard's graduating class of 2017 wait for former classmate Deniz Cataltepe, a children's doctor running in honor of her late brother, who passed two years prior.

Greenpoint, Brooklyn
“This is one day that unites us all in this crazy, crazy town," says a spectator in Greenpoint. "I was always a hater, because it makes the traffic so terrible, but this year I embraced the marathon. I get it!”

Greenpoint, Brooklyn
“We live right here, on the block," says the woman holding the Mexican flag. "This is our favorite day in New York. It makes the rent worth it!"

Lafayette Avenue, Fort Greene, Brooklyn
"This baby has to learn to cheer like a pro,” says expectant mother Haley, nine months along at the time of the race.

First Avenue, Upper East Side, Manhattan
“We love watching the Marathon,” say members of the Sisters of Life religious community. “The whole city comes together. We wish it could be like this every day, everyone cheering for their neighbors.”

Greenpoint, Brooklyn
“It's only 1:30pm and we’ve given out 240 water bottles. We bought the water with our own money. The cashier saw what we were doing, and she bought a carton of bottles too for us to hand out.”

Fourth Avenue, Brooklyn
Local cats Steven and Hot Fudge enlisted human stand-ins to cheer for their cat parent.

Lafayette Avenue, Fort Greene, Brooklyn
Runners zip through Fort Greene's shady, tree-lined streets.