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All the United States New York State New York City Manhattan Grand Central Ceiling Dark Patch

Grand Central Ceiling Dark Patch

A dark patch of the ceiling at Grand Central Terminal which was not restored is still stained brown by tobacco.

New York, New York

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Grimy, smokey patch left behind after cleaning   cisc1970
The dark patch is visible in the northwest corner of the ceiling near the claw of the crab   Arnoldius
The Grand Central main concourse of an earlier, smokier time   New York Public Library Digital Collection
Grand Central Main Concourse - now with less grime   MsSaraKelly
The smoke rose up and was trapped, staining the celestial ceiling   National Park Service, status awarded in 1976
The restored ceiling   Monica Arellano-Ongpin
Grand Central Terminal - fully restored   m01229
  SEANETTA / Atlas Obscura User
  jnthnnvk / Atlas Obscura User
Dark patch   Guru Chill / Atlas Obscura User
  SEANETTA / Atlas Obscura User
  wherearewedude / Atlas Obscura User
  wherearewedude / Atlas Obscura User
  Julius Spada / Atlas Obscura User
  kassrb9039 / Atlas Obscura User
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About

In 1998, after two years of renovations, the scaffolding came down from Grand Central Terminal’s Main Concourse. After decades of neglect and decline the station was finally being restored, including a thorough scrubbing of the ceiling. Well, nearly thorough.

Along with the sparkle and shine, the restoration crew left behind a grimy reminder of the station’s smoky past. In the northwest corner of the ceiling, crossing the teal-blue background and the arch over the West Balcony, there is a small, dark rectangle that was left untouched. Look up and find the crab, and near its claw you can still see the spot, almost 20 years later.

A sticky patina of water stains, train soot, dirt and grime had smothered the ceiling, but the key ingredient in the brown sludge was tobacco—decades and decades of cigarette smoke wafting up with no means of escape. To clean it all and still preserve the ceiling’s luster was painstaking work, using only mild sudsy water and gentle scrubbing with Q-tips.  

The ceiling depicts a string of astrological signs, starting with the crab in the northwest and curving to the southeast. The order of the signs is actually in reverse of the true night sky, likely a mistake made by the original designer. The quirk was cleverly explained back in 1913 by Cornelius Vanderbilt (the original owner and builder of the terminal) as being a depiction of the heavenly bodies not as they would be seen from below, but from above—as if by God himself. 

The restored ceiling isn’t from 1913; that one had already fallen into disrepair by the 1940s. It was covered over with panels that recreated the original design (although some Grand Central purists insist the original puts this one to shame). Removing the panels and restoring underneath was considered, but they contain asbestos and removing them would have been nearly impossible in a train station that serves over half a million people a day. Besides the asbestos problem, the architects overseeing the restoration claim the original ceiling was already so damaged it was beyond repair.

So no harm, no foul. What we have now in Grand Central, including the divine ceiling, is a jewel of a station. Gone are the cracks and water damage, the grime and the soot, and gone are the cigarettes.

Related Tags

Architecture Trains Murals Astronomy Aletrail

Know Before You Go

Grand Central Terminal is at 42nd Street and Park Avenue, served by commuter trains and several subway lines. Enter on the 42nd Street side and walk straight into the Main Concourse. Look up in the far corner over the West Balcony and you can see the dark spot that was left unscrubbed.The ceiling of Grand Central Terminal is decorated with a mural of the celestial sky depicting constellations, including the signs of the zodiac.The patch is just to the left of the image of Cancer, the crab.

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Edited By

SEANETTA, jnthnnvk, wherearewedude, kassrb9039...

  • SEANETTA
  • jnthnnvk
  • wherearewedude
  • kassrb9039
  • redleafwater7
  • Guru Chill
  • Julius Spada

Published

August 31, 2016

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Sources
  • http://www.amny.com/secrets-of-new-york/secrets-of-grand-central-terminal-1.6743090
  • http://www.nytimes.com/1996/09/20/nyregion/work-starts-100-feet-above-grand-central-commuters.html
  • http://www.nytimes.com/1996/02/03/nyregion/cleansing-triumphant-portal-ceiling.html
  • http://www.nytimes.com/1998/10/02/nyregion/gritty-depot-glittery-destination-refurbished-grand-central-terminal-worthy-its.html
Grand Central Ceiling Dark Patch
Grand Central Terminal
89 East 42nd Street
New York, New York
United States
40.752751, -73.977219
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