- Eventos & Festivais
- Em toda a cidade
Uma retrospectiva da maior maratona de NYC
Em 3 de novembro de 2024, mais de 55.000 corredores foram às ruas para a TCS New York City Marathon, tornando-a a maior maratona de todos os tempos. Cerca de 2 milhões de espectadores ladearam as ruas, transformando calçadas em festas improvisadas ao longo de zonas populares de relógios, como a First Avenue em Upper Manhattan e grande parte de Greenpoint, Brooklyn.
Realizada pela primeira vez em 1970, com apenas 127 participantes correndo em loops no Central Park, a maratona cresceu para receber corredores de elite, celebridades e milhares de outros. Eles têm uma vantagem especial em todos os cinco bairros, indo da ponte Verrazzano-Narrows até a última ponte (Madison Avenue) antes de cruzar a linha de chegada no Central Park para torcer.
Mas a experiência é mais do que apenas a corrida. O Marathon Sunday é uma celebração em toda a cidade com bandas ao vivo, placas caseiras e espectadores distribuindo tudo, desde fatias de laranja a tecidos. Confira momentos inesquecíveis do dia da corrida do ano passado em nossa galeria abaixo.

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.