'Canstruction' site puts focus on hunger in city
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If it's Thanksgiving, then it's time for Snoopy, even in can-sculpture form. (Photos: Ivonne Snavely)
By Ivonne Snavely
Special to amNewYork
A giant rat on a hunger strike picketed next to a full-bellied Snoopy. Just around the corner, Michael Phelps came up for air as he swam some laps.
Oh, and one more thing: All of these sculptures are made of cans full of food – 161,000 of them to be exact, painstakingly designed and stacked by 40 teams of engineers and architects competing in the annual pre-Thanksgiving “canstruction” competition at the Winter Garden in lower Manhattan.
The teams began work at dinnertime Wednesday and finished around dawn Thursday. Or at least most of them did. At midmorning, at least one straggler was still there, repairing a portion of a baseball-stadium sculpture that had toppled.
Leah Kaplan, who took part in the competition for 14 years and now helps to run it, stood in front of a model of Giant Stadium taller than she is.
“It is a lot of work, but I luckily didn’t have to stay here until the bitter end,” she said, laughing as she described the previous night’s construction frenzy. “There were teams everywhere, cans here and there and the last team didn’t leave until 5 o’clock this morning.”
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Barbara Corcoran opened her real estate business in New York in 1973 and is now an author and real estate expert who appears regularly on NBC's "Today" show.
